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Recognition of coagulation factor VIII by CD4+ T cells of healthy humans
Author(s) -
Hu GL.,
Okita D. K.,
DiethelmOkita B. M.,
ContiFine B. M.
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
journal of thrombosis and haemostasis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.947
H-Index - 178
eISSN - 1538-7836
pISSN - 1538-7933
DOI - 10.1046/j.1538-7836.2003.00366.x
Subject(s) - coagulation , medicine , immunology
Summary. Hemophilia A patients treated with coagulation factor (F)VIII may develop an anti‐FVIII immune response. Anti‐FVIII antibodies may occur also in healthy subjects. To understand the extent to which an immune response to FVIII occurs in healthy subjects, we investigated the proliferative response of blood CD4+ T cells from 90 blood donors to FVIII and to pools of overlapping synthetic peptides spanning the sequences of individual FVIII domains (A1–A3, C1–C2). Most subjects responded to FVIII and several FVIII domains. Men had stronger responses to FVIII than women, and older subjects than younger subjects. The domain‐induced responses were weaker than the FVIII‐induced responses, yet their intensity in individual subjects correlated with that of the response to FVIII. We examined whether Th1 and/or Th2 cells responded to FVIII in 68 subjects, by determining the CD4+ T cells that secreted interferon‐γ (IFN‐γ) or interleukin (IL)‐5 after stimulation with FVIII: 25 subjects had FVIII‐specific IFN‐γ‐secreting cells, and seven of them had also FVIII‐specific IL‐5‐secreting cells. None had only IL‐5‐secreting cells. Thus, a CD4+ T cell response to FVIII, which first involves Th1 cells, is common among subjects with a normal procoagulant function.