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Local and Systemic CD4 + T Cell Exhaustion Reverses with Clinical Resolution of Pulmonary Sarcoidosis.

Investigation of the Th1 immune response in sarcoidosis CD4+ T cells has revealed reduced proliferative capacity and cytokine expression upon TCR stimulation. In other disease models, such cellular dysfunction has been associated with a step-wise, progressive loss of T cell function that results from chronic antigenic stimulation. T cell exhaustion is defined by decreased cytokine production upon TCR activation, decreased proliferation, increased expression of inhibitory cell surface receptors, and increased susceptibility to apoptosis. We characterized sarcoidosis CD4+ T cell immune function in systemic and local environments among subjects undergoing disease progression compared to those experiencing disease resolution. Spontaneous and TCR-stimulated Th1 cytokine expression and proliferation assays were performed in 53 sarcoidosis subjects and 30 healthy controls. PD-1 expression and apoptosis were assessed by flow cytometry. Compared to healthy controls, sarcoidosis CD4+ T cells demonstrated reductions in Th1 cytokine expression, proliferative capacity ( p < 0.05), enhanced apoptosis ( p < 0.01), and increased PD-1 expression ( p < 0.001). BAL-derived CD4+ T cells also demonstrated multiple facets of T cell exhaustion ( p < 0.05). Reversal of CD4+ T cell exhaustion was observed in subjects undergoing spontaneous resolution ( p < 0.05). Sarcoidosis CD4+ T cells exhibit loss of cellular function during progressive disease that follows the archetype of T cell exhaustion.

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