Acta Dermato-Venereologica (Jun 2017)

Folliculotropic Mycosis Fungoides with Skewed T-cell Receptor CDR3 Motif: Suggestive of Lipid-antigen Selection?

  • Panagiota Mantaka,
  • Agnieszka Malecka,
  • Gunhild Trøen,
  • Per Helsing,
  • Petter Gjersvik,
  • Klaus Beiske,
  • Jan Delabie

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2340/00015555-2722
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 97, no. 9
pp. 1081 – 1086

Abstract

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Folliculotropic mycosis fungoides (FMF), a variant of mycosis fungoides (MF) with distinct clinical features, is characterized by infiltration of malignant T cells in hair follicles. This raises the hypothesis that antigens in the hair follicle may contribute to the pathogenesis of FMF. T-cell receptor β gene (TRB) sequences as well as dendritic cell subsets in patients with FMF (n = 21) and control patients with MF (n = 20) were studied to explore this hypothesis. A recurrent usage of the TRB junctional genes TRBJ2-1 and TRBJ2-7 was found in patients with FMF compared with those with MF. These genes contribute to an amino acid motif in the complementarity-determining region 3 (CDR3) of the T-cell receptor. This motif was previously found in T cells stimulated by lipids bound to CD1 on antigen-presenting cells. Additional immunohistochemical analysis revealed abundant CD1c- and CD1a- expressing dendritic cells in FMF. The combined findings support a role for lipid-antigen stimulation in FMF.

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