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  • Title: Increased intraepithelial (CD103+) CD8+ T cells in the airways of smokers with and without chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
    Author: Mikko M, Forsslund H, Cui L, Grunewald J, Wheelock AM, Wahlström J, Sköld CM.
    Journal: Immunobiology; 2013 Feb; 218(2):225-31. PubMed ID: 22652413.
    Abstract:
    T cells are accumulated in the lungs of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients. Intraepithelial T cells, expressing the integrin αE (CD103) β7, and regulatory T cells have been implicated in pathogenesis of the disease. We asked whether COPD patients and smokers have altered frequencies of these T cells and if their phenotypes differ. A total of 40 never-smokers, 40 smokers with normal lung function and 38 COPD patients (GOLD I and II), of which 11 were ex-smokers, were included. T cells in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid and peripheral blood were analysed for the expression of CD103, FOXP3 and markers of activation and differentiation using multi-colour flow cytometry. Smokers, regardless of airway obstruction, had significantly more CD8+CD103+ cells in their BAL fluid compared to never-smokers but less of those cells were CD27+CD69-. Smokers, in particular those with chronic bronchitis, had a higher percentage of CD4+FOXP3+ T-regulatory BAL cells compared to never-smokers and COPD ex-smokers. Chronic cigarette smoking leads to an accumulation of CD8+ T cells with an altered phenotype in the airway epithelium. The increased frequency of regulatory T cells may influence the ability to regulate smoke-induced inflammation which could be decisive for disease development. Our results further indicate a reversibility of smoke-induced changes.
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