| Literature DB >> 3553227 |
F T Koster, D M Scollard, E T Umland, D B Fishbein, W C Hanly, P J Brennan, K E Nelson.
Abstract
The ability of phenolic glycolipid I (PhenGL-I) of Mycobacterium leprae to stimulate in vitro lymphocyte proliferation (LP) was tested in cultures of peripheral blood cells from 42 patients with leprosy in Chicago and Thailand, 9 individuals with household contact in Thailand, and 10 unexposed North American controls. Only 10 responders (24%) were found among the patients, and the degree of LP was small. Responders were found among patients with lepromatous (18%) or tuberculoid (30%) leprosy without relation to age, complications, duration of treatment, or lepromin responsiveness. The specificity of the response was supported by a lack of response to two other glycolipids, by responses by T cells but not B cells, and by the observation that three of four responders tested maintained their responses to PhenGL-I for at least 1 year. Serum immunoglobulin M (IgM) and IgG antibodies were measured in the same patients by using PhenGL-I or its terminal monosaccharide conjugated to a bovine serum albumin carrier in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The presence of IgM antibody correlated negatively with LP to lepromin and to PhenGL-I in patients with tuberculoid leprosy. We conclude that circulating T cells from some leprosy patients proliferate in the presence of PhenGL-I in vitro, but the response is weak, possibly due to concomitant suppression or inhibition. The predominance of IgM antibody to PhenGL-I may be related to a lack of a T-helper-cell-mediated switch to IgG antibody response.Entities:
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Year: 1987 PMID: 3553227 PMCID: PMC265987 DOI: 10.1128/jcm.25.3.551-556.1987
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Microbiol ISSN: 0095-1137 Impact factor: 5.948