Jonathan Edwards
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
I’ve definitely seen decent evidence of clonal expansion specifically in psoriatic lesions (not so much the blood), almost entirely Th17 if I’m remembering correctly. I will have to go back to find the specific papers to make sure I’m not misremembering. Don’t know off the top of my head about the other conditions
Yes, there has been a recent story about T cell specificity in skin in psoriasis which may turn out valid, although every other story of this sort over the years has fizzled out as far as I know. The real problem with local sampling I guess is that you don't have any 'normal control' T cell spectra. It may be that if you get loads of T cells in skin then you always get some odd clone that recognises an obscure calcium binding protein or something turning up in droves. There really ought to be some crucial clonal specificity involved but it does seem quite hard to prove - people have been looking in these diseases since the 1990s at least.
TCR analysis methods from the past 10 years are largely unbiased sequencing. So long as you sequence enough cells you can detect and quantify even “rare” memory clones (though you generally won’t know what they target unless you can match the CDR3 sequence to one that is well-validated to bind a specific peptide). Good for finding needles
O but has anyone found much in the way of relevant needles?
I’m not sure subfornical organ would make sense since even that mouse paper from last year showed good T cell exchange between it and the blood.
But that wouldn't guarantee numbers in blood which will be dependent on trafficking in and out in various places. It reminds me of the fact that streoid increase neutrophils in blood, which at first seems backwards because steroids reduce inflammation. But they do so by reducing the efflux from blood to elsewhere.
I would buy the arguments if there were a string of diseases where T cell population roles had now been worked out. I may be behnd the times but I haven't heard of anything much in the diseases I used to work on. Even in MS people are still basing their belief in T cell roles on disanalogous mouse models.
