Author/Authors :
Zhang، نويسنده , , Zheng and Xu، نويسنده , , Dongping and Li، نويسنده , , Yonggang and Jin، نويسنده , , Lei and Shi، نويسنده , , Ming and Wang، نويسنده , , Min and Zhou، نويسنده , , Xianzhi and Wu، نويسنده , , Hao and Gao، نويسنده , , George F. and Wang، نويسنده , , Fu-Sheng، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
In this study, we found that 74 patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) exhibited a rapid, dramatic decrease in numbers of circulating myeloid and plasmacytoid dendritic cells (mDCs and pDCs) during the first 2 weeks of illness (5.3- and 28.4-fold reductions for mDCs and pDCs compared with 25 healthy individuals, respectively), with slow return to normal cell numbers during convalescence (weeks 5–7 of illness on average). In addition, numbers of circulating CD4 and CD8 T cells exhibited milder reductions (2.1- and 1.8-fold at week 1) and earlier return to normal at a mean of weeks 3 and 4, respectively. A significant inverse correlation was found between numbers of DC and T-cell subsets and high-dose steroid treatment. Our novel findings thus suggest that the acute SARS-coronavirus infection probably contributes to the initial reduction of DC and T-cell subsets in blood, and that high-dose steroid administration may subsequently exacerbate and prolong low expression of the cell subsets. These findings will aid the framing of further studies of the immunopathogenesis of SARS.
Keywords :
SARS , Myeloid dendritic cells , Plasmacytoid dendritic cells , coronavirus , Steroid