Infection of human synovial cells by human T cell lymphotropic virus type I. Proliferation and granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor production by synovial …

M Sakai, K Eguchi, K Terada… - The Journal of …, 1993 - Am Soc Clin Investig
M Sakai, K Eguchi, K Terada, M Nakashima, I Yamashita, H Ida, Y Kawabe, T Aoyagi…
The Journal of clinical investigation, 1993Am Soc Clin Investig
The present study was performed to clarify the relationship between human T cell
lymphotropic virus type I (HTLV-I) infection and chronic inflammatory arthropathy. To
determine the ability of HTLV-I to infect synovial cells and the effect on synovial cell
proliferation, synovial cells were cocultured with the HTLV-I-producing T cell lines (MT-2 or
HCT-1). After coculture with HTLV-I-infected T cells, the synovial cells expressed HTLV-I-
specific core antigens, and HTLV-I proviral DNA was detected from the synovial cells by …
The present study was performed to clarify the relationship between human T cell lymphotropic virus type I (HTLV-I) infection and chronic inflammatory arthropathy. To determine the ability of HTLV-I to infect synovial cells and the effect on synovial cell proliferation, synovial cells were cocultured with the HTLV-I-producing T cell lines (MT-2 or HCT-1). After coculture with HTLV-I-infected T cells, the synovial cells expressed HTLV-I-specific core antigens, and HTLV-I proviral DNA was detected from the synovial cells by polymerase chain reaction. These cocultured synovial cells with HTLV-I-infected T cells proliferated more actively than the synovial cells cocultured with uninfected T cells. This stimulatory effect of HTLV-I-infected T cells on synovial cell proliferation seems necessary to contact each other. After being cocultured with MT-2 cells, synovial cells proliferated more actively than control cells even after several passages. Furthermore, HTLV-I-infected synovial cells produced significant amounts of granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor. These results suggest that HTLV-I can infect synovial cells, resulting their active proliferation and may be involved in the pathogenesis of proliferative synovitis similar to that found in rheumatoid arthritis.
Images
The Journal of Clinical Investigation