Immune deficiency in the X-linked lymphoproliferative syndrome. II. Immunoregulatory T cell defects.

1982 
Surface phenotypic markers and the function of lymphocytes in patients affected with the X-linked lymphoproliferative syndrome (XLP) were studied. This syndrome is characterized by a defective response to infection with Epstein Barr virus (EBV). Normal numbers of B and T cells were detected with anti-Ig and monoclonal OKT3 antisera, respectively. T cell subset values, however, were persistently altered: cells reacting with OKT8 were significantly elevated in five of nine patients, accompanied by a slight decrease in the percentage of OKT4-positive cells, leading to abnormally low OKT4 to OKT8 ratios. One patient had a high OKT4 to OKT8 ratio due to low number of OKT8-positive cells. Lymphocytes from patients showed normal proliferation after stimulation with T and B cell mitogens. In contrast, Ig synthesis by lymphocytes after stimulation with B cell mitogens was markedly deficient: low or undetectable levels of one or all classes of Ig were detected, whereas cell lines established from EBV-infected B lymphocytes from patients produced normal quantities of Ig. These studies imply immune regulatory impairments in the patient with XLP.
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