Background: Oral lichen planus (OLP) is a common T-cell-dominated oral chronic inflammatory disease occurring in periods of remission, quiescence, activity with pronounced inflammation, and acute ulceration. Cell infiltrates in OLP contain varying numbers of CD4 T cells expressing the transcription factor FoxP3. FoxP3 CD4 T cells are, however, a heterogeneous cell population containing suppressive and non-suppressive cells, and their distribution in infiltrates from OLP is unknown.
Methods: Biopsies were taken from normal oral mucosa (n = 8) and OLP lesions (n = 19), and a set of in situ methods for the determination of the functional phenotype of FoxP3 CD4 T cells was applied.
Results: Numbers of FoxP3 CD4 T cells were highest in the atrophic form of the disease, yet low in the ulcerative form. The main FoxP3 CD4 T-cell population observed was FoxP3 CD45RA CD25 CD45RO and CD15s , a phenotype delineating a non-suppressive subset. Numbers of cells with an actively suppressing phenotype (FoxP3 CD45RA CD25 CD45RO and CD15s ) were, however, about twice as high in reticular lesions as compared with the atrophic form. Many FoxP3 CD4 T cells expressed T-bet, the hallmark transcription factor for IFN-γ-producing T cells, indicating that they may enhance immune and inflammatory responses rather than suppress them.
Conclusions: The absence of actively suppressing FoxP3 CD4 T cells may in part explain why OLP is a remarkably persisting condition, in spite of the presence of substantially high numbers of FoxP3 CD4 T cells. The findings emphasize that it is crucial to examine not only numbers but also functional phenotype of FoxP3 CD4 T cells in human tissues.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jop.12447 | DOI Listing |
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