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Russ J Immunol. 2001 Jul;6(2):131-146.

Peripheral T Cell Apoptosis and Its Role in Generalized Bacterial Infections: A Minireview.

Russian journal of immunology : RJI : official journal of Russian Society of Immunology

Helen R. Chernykh, Maxim N. Norkin, Olga Yu. Leplina, Nataliya A. Khonina, Marina A. Tihonova, Alexander A. Ostanin

Affiliations

  1. Institute of Clinical Immunology, Siberian Branch of Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, Novosibirsk, Russia.

PMID: 12687214

Abstract

In the present review we have attempted to analyze recent findings concerning apoptosis of mature peripheral T cells. The great attention is made to the factors underlying resistance or sensitivity of mature T lymphocytes to activation-induced cell death. The role of preactivation and altered costimulation is discussed in this regard. Besides, the possible role of cytokines in the modulation of T cell apoptosis is emphasized. Particular attention is paid to the studies of apoptosis disorders in the pathogenesis of generalized bacterial infections. In this connection some own results are summarized as well. To characterize T cell death and its role in the pathogenesis of bacterial infections an anti-CD3-mAb or Con A-induced apoptosis in patients with severe and generalized forms of surgical infections have been investigated. We have found a significant increase of activation-induced lymphocyte apoptosis and a high level of apoptosis in freshly isolated lymphocytes in patients with surgical infections. Alternatively, peripheral blood mononuclear cells from surgical patients without infectious complications did not exhibit a marked enhancement of activation-induced cell death. Activation-induced T cell death in surgical infections appeared to be Fas-dependent, involved reactive oxygen intermediates and was partly prevented by pro-inflammatory cytokines, among which IL-2 exhibited the most pronounced anti-apoptotic activity. Likewise, APACHE II score, as a marker of the infection severity, directly correlated with a rate of activation-induced T cell apoptosis. Accelerated T cell apoptosis at the early stage of infection was revealed in survivors and non-survivors, that appears to designate a common pathway for the restriction of systemic inflammation. At the late stage of infection altered T cell apoptosis could account for different outcomes, since the patients with lethal outcome showed 2-fold increase in activation-induced cell death compared to the opposite group. Immunotherapy with rIL-2 declined anti-CD3-induced apoptosis and promoted a reduction in the mortality rate from 29% to 13%.

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