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The Function of Gingival Lymphocytes on The Establishment of Human Periodontitis

H. Okada 1, Y. Shimabukuro 1, Y. Kassai 1, H. Ito 1, T. Matsuo 1, S. Ebisu 1, , and Y. Harada 1

1 Department of Periodontology and Endodontology, Faculty of Dentistry, Osaka University, 1-8, Yamadaoka, Suita City, Osaka, 565, Japan

Human periodontitis has been confirmed to be an IgG plasma cell-rich lesion. However, we also detected many T cells, both CD4-positive and CD8-positive cells, in periodontal lesions. Some of these T cells expressed HLA-DR(la-like) antigen on their surfaces, and the proportion of HLA-DR+ cells was approximately equal in both CD4+ and CD8+ cell populations (Okada et al., 1983, 1984). Consequently, both helper and suppressor T cells were believed to participate in the establishment of periodontal lesions.

On the other hand, B cells were thought to be activated polyclonally in periodontal lesions, because a variety of periodontal florae possessed polyclonal B-cell-activating activity. We demonstrated that Actinomyces viscosus T14V stimulated mouse spleen B cells polyclonally and induced many IgM-producing cells but few IgG-producing cells. Moreover, IgG-producing cells were differentiated from only surface IgG-positive B cells but not from surface IgG-negative B cells—namely, surface IgM- or IgA-positive B cells (Harada et al., 1988). These results suggested that memory B cells, which had already been primed with appropriate antigens, might migrate into periodontal lesions, and then be activated polyclonally and develop into IgG-producing cells.

The periodontal lesion could, therefore, be induced by the interactions of immunoregulatory mechanisms of T cells and polyclonal B cell activity of periodontal florae. In fact, L3T4-positive T cells (helper-inducer T cells) enhanced IgG synthesis of mouse spleen B cells which had been activated with T-independent B cell activators such as LPS and A. viscosus preparations (Okada et al, 1987; Ito et al., 1988). We hypothesized from the above results that autoreactive T cells recognized the increasing self-MHC class II(Ia) antigen on B cells which had been activated with polyclonal B cell activators, and then produced soluble factors, which could enhance IgG synthesis of these B cells. Autoreactive T cells as well as PBAs, thus, may play an important role in the establishment of the IgG plasma cell-rich periodontal lesion.




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Crit. Rev. Oral Biol. Med.Home page
E. Gemmell, K. Yamazaki, and G.J. Seymour
DESTRUCTIVE PERIODONTITIS LESIONS ARE DETERMINED BY THE NATURE OF THE LYMPHOCYTIC RESPONSE
Crit. Rev. Oral. Biol. Med., January 1, 2002; 13(1): 17 - 34.
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