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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, March 2004, p. 330-336, Vol. 11, No. 2
1071-412X/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/CDLI.11.2.330-336.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
D8/17 and CD19 Expression on Lymphocytes of Patients with Acute Rheumatic Fever and Tourette's Disorder
Julie L. Weisz, William M. McMahon, Jill C. Moore, Nancy H. Augustine, John F. Bohnsack, James F. Bale, Michael B. Johnson, Jubel F. Morgan, Jenise Jensen, Lloyd Y. Tani, L. George Veasy, and Harry R. Hill*
Departments of Pathology, Psychiatry, Internal Medicine, and Pediatrics, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah 84132
Received 16 June 2003/
Returned for modification 8 August 2003/
Accepted 3 December 2003

ABSTRACT
D8/17, an alloantigen found on B lymphocytes, has been reported
to be elevated in patients susceptible to rheumatic fever and
may be associated with autoimmune types of neuropsychiatric
disorders. The pediatric-autoimmune-neuropsychiatric-disorders-associated-with-streptococci
model is a putative model of pathogenesis for a group of children
whose symptoms of obsessive-compulsive disorder and Tourette's
disorder (TD) are abrupt and may be triggered by an infection
with group A streptococci. As a test of this model, we have
examined D8/17 levels on the B cells of patients with TD and
acute rheumatic fever (ARF) along with those on the B cells
of normal controls by flow cytometry. We have utilized several
different preparations of D8/17 antibody along with a variety
of secondary antibodies but have been unable to show an association
with an elevated percentage of D8/17-positive, CD19-positive
B cells in either ARF or TD. We did find, however, that the
percentages of CD19-positive B cells in ARF and TD patients
were significantly elevated compared to those in normal controls.
Group A streptococcal pharyngitis patients also had an elevated
percentage of CD19 B cells, however. These studies failed to
confirm the utility of determining the percentage of B cells
expressing the D8/17 alloantigen in ARF patients or our sample
of TD patients. In contrast, the percentage of CD19-positive
B cells was significantly elevated in ARF and TD patients, as
well as group A streptococcal pharyngitis patients, suggesting
a role for inflammation and/or autoimmunity in the pathogenesis
of these disorders.

INTRODUCTION
D8/17 is an alloantigen found on B lymphocytes and has been
reported to be elevated in patients with acute rheumatic fever
(ARF) (
7,
8,
11). It is detected using a murine monoclonal antibody,
derived by immunization with isolated B lymphocytes obtained
from patients with rheumatic fever or rheumatic heart disease
(
4,
20), and has been reported to be expressed on elevated percentages
of B cells in over 90% of rheumatic fever patients (
11). This
has led to the hypothesis that D8/17 may be a susceptibility
marker for the development of rheumatic fever. D8/17 expression
on B cells has also been reported to be elevated in patients
with pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorders associated
with streptococci (PANDAS) (
17,
19). The PANDAS model was proposed
by Swedo et al. (
19) for children whose symptoms of obsessive-compulsive
disorder appear abruptly and are triggered by an infection with
group A beta-hemolytic streptococci similar to that of Sydenham
chorea, a manifestation of ARF. These authors reported that
the D8/17 marker was expressed on elevated percentages of B
cells in 85% of PANDAS patients and 89% of Sydenham chorea patients
compared to 17% of healthy controls. Subsequently, Murphy et
al. (
17) indicated that patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder
and/or Tourette's disorder (TD) had a mean percentage of D8/17-positive
B cells of 22% but that in control subjects the mean percentage
of D8/17-positive B cells was 9%. However, more recently, a
study reported failure to replicate the association between
an elevated level of D8/17 expression on B cells and PANDAS
(
10).
Elevated percentages of B cells have been reported in a number of autoimmune diseases, and this condition has been shown to be related to genetic quantitative trait loci (5, 13).
In the present study, we have examined D8/17 expression as a percentage of the total number of lymphocytes expressing D8/17 and as a percentage of CD19-positive B cells expressing D8/17 in patients with ARF and TD (as a test of the PANDAS model) and have compared these results with those for normal controls. In addition, we have quantitated the percentages of total CD19-positive B cells in controls and the two patient groups, along with a second control group of patients with group A streptococcal pharyngitis. In contrast to the results in several previous reports, we could not document elevated percentages of D8/17-positive B cells in patients with ARF and TD compared to those in controls but we did find higher percentages of CD19-positive B cells in each patient group.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Sample collection.
The levels of D8/17 and CD19 expression on B cells were determined
for 24 ARF patients, 33 TD patients, 17 streptococcal pharyngitis
patients, and 98 unaffected controls. University of Utah Institutional
Review Board-approved consent was obtained for all individuals.
ARF was confirmed by the Jones criteria. TD subjects were recruited
from an ongoing family genetics study. TD cases were required
to meet diagnostic criteria specified in the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (fourth edition [text revision]) of the American
Psychiatric Association (
1) and the Yale Global Tic Severity
Scale (
14). While other childhood psychiatric disorders (such
as anorexia nervosa [
18] and autism [
9]) have been reported
to be associated with elevated D8/17 expression, only subjects
with TD were included in our sample. Patients with pharyngitis
had culture-documented group A streptococcal throat infections
at the time of blood collection. The controls were normal individuals
without a history of rheumatic fever or tics. All controls reported
being healthy at the time of the blood draw. Blood was drawn
in anticoagulant-citrate-dextrose solution A or B Vacutainer
tubes (Becton Dickinson, San Jose, Calif.).
D8/17 staining protocol.
Staining was performed according to the methodology first described by Chapman et al. (4) by adding 100 µl of D8/17 monoclonal antibody to 300 µl of whole blood and incubating for 1 h at 4°C. The D8/17 monoclonal antibody was originally supplied to us by John Zabriskie of the Rockefeller University. The concentration of this exact antibody was not specified, but we used it at a final dilution of 1:8, which we found to be optimal. We later used a commercial preparation from Goodwin Biotechnology Incorporated (Plantation, Fla.) at a concentration of 7.5 µg/ml, again found to be optimal. Once we discovered that this preparation actually had a very low antibody content, we obtained the original D8/17 cell line from the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC; Rockville, Md.). This cell line was maintained in our laboratory at 37°C with 5% CO2 by using RPMI 1640 (BioWhittaker, Walkersville, Md.) containing 10% fetal bovine serum (Atlanta Biologicals, Norcross, Ga.), 1% gentamicin (BioWhittaker), and 4 mM L-glutamine (BioWhittaker)/ml. Supernatant from this cell line was found to have 30 µg of immunoglobulin M (IgM) antibody/ml. When we tested the supernatant against the positive (VWB) and negative (LG2) cell lines, we determined that a concentration of 3 µg/ml worked most consistently. Mouse IgM (Dako, Carpinteria, Calif.) was used in place of the D8/17 antibody as the negative control at the same concentration as the D8/17 monoclonal antibody. Following incubation, 3 ml of phosphate-buffered saline with 0.5% bovine serum albumin and 0.1% NaN3 was added to the sample, which was then centrifuged for 5 min at 200 x g. Forty microliters of fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgM (Caltag, Burlingame, Calif.), diluted to a concentration of 70 µg/ml, was added to the pellet, mixed, incubated for 30 min at 4°C, and then washed as before. Forty microliters of phycoerythrin-labeled CD19 antibody (Becton Dickinson), diluted to a concentration of 26 µg/ml, was then added to the pellet, mixed, and incubated for 20 min at 4°C. Following the third incubation, the red blood cells were lysed with 3 ml of Becton Dickinson fluorescence-activated cell sorter lysing solution at a dilution of 1:10. The samples were incubated at room temperature for 5 min and then centrifuged for 5 min at 200 x g. The cell pellet was washed as before to remove any residual red blood cells. The samples were resuspended in 300 µl of phosphate-buffered saline and analyzed within 2 h by flow cytometry (4).
Flow cytometry.
We employed the flow cytometric method of Chapman et al. (4) to determine the level of D8/17 expression on B cells. The samples were analyzed on a Becton Dickinson FACScan using Cellquest software. Five thousand lymphocytes were gated using a forward-scatter and side-scatter dot plot. From this, a second dot plot of FL1 (D8/17-FITC) and FL2 (phycoerythrin-CD19) with quadrants was used to analyze the cells. Double-staining CD19-positive B cells in the upper right quadrant were considered positive for D8/17. This dot plot was used to calculate the percentage of total lymphocytes staining for both CD19 and D8/17 (Fig. 1A) as well as the percentage of total lymphocytes expressing CD19. To calculate the percentage of CD19-positive B cells expressing D8/17, we gated the upper two quadrants of the FL1-FL2 dot plot to encompass only the CD19-positive B cells (Fig. 1B). We also gated monocyte and neutrophil populations, and neither expressed D8/17 or CD19 as expected.
Streptococcal antibody measurement.
Throat swabs and sera were also obtained from some of the ARF
and TD subjects at the time blood was drawn for the D8/17 assay.
Throat swabs were plated onto 5% Columbia sheep's blood agar
and incubated for 24 to 48 h at 37°C. Anti-streptolysin
O (ASO) titers were measured using the Colorcard ASO kit from
Wampole (Cranbury, N.J.). Anti-DNase B titers were measured
using the Streptonase-B kit, also from Wampole. Instructions
included with each kit were followed. ASO titers of

200
IU/ml were considered to be elevated, while an anti-DNase B
titer of

1:170 for subjects ages 6 to 17 and a
titer of

1:60 for subjects under 6 years of age
were considered to be elevated. The normal values were obtained
from ARUP Laboratories, the University of Utah exoteric reference
laboratory.
Statistical analysis.
Statistical analysis was performed using the Student t test. Analysis of variance was also performed on all comparisons and resulted in essentially the same statistical significance. Given the variability of the results with each of the monoclonal D8/17 antibodies and the two methods of calculating the level of D8/17 expression (as a percentage of the total number of lymphocytes expressing D8/17 or as a percentage of CD19-positive B cells expressing D8/17), we were unable to arrive at a figure to be used as a cutoff for positive patients or controls.

RESULTS
Initially, we analyzed the samples for the percentage of total
lymphocytes expressing both the D8/17 and CD19 antigens. Employing
this method of calculation and monoclonal antibodies obtained
from both Goodwin and Zabriskie, we obtained highly significant
results for the patient groups and controls (Table
1). The percentages
were very comparable to what has been reported before in the
literature (
8,
11,
16,
17,
19). We then analyzed the data to
determine the percentage of CD19-positive B cells expressing
the D8/17 marker by using the flow cytometry method as originally
described (
4). When the level of D8/17 expression as a percentage
of CD19-positive B cells expressing D8/17 was calculated, all
three subject groups had much higher percentages of B cells
expressing the D8/17 antigen. There was no significant difference,
however, between the controls and either patient group (Table
1).
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TABLE 1. Comparison of levels of D8/17 expression found in ARF and TD patients and normal control subjects by using D8/17 monoclonal antibody preparations from three different sources
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The much higher percentage of D8/17-positive B cells observed
with the Goodwin and Zabriskie monoclonal antibodies led us
to obtain the original D8/17 cell lines from the ATCC. Using
supernatant from the D8/17 cell line grown in our laboratory,
we have documented a high percentage of D8/17-positive cells
in the VWB positive cell line (mean ± standard deviation
[SD], 19.79% ± 10.93%;
n = 19). In contrast, the percentage
of D8/17-positive cells in the negative LG2 cell line was much
lower (mean ± SD, 2.09% ± 1.24%;
P = 0.000001;
n = 19) (Fig.
2). Employing supernatants from this ATCC D8/17
cell line, however, we were still unable to document differences
in the percentages of CD19-positive B cells expressing D8/17
between ARF patients and controls (Table
1).
We had difficulties with other reagents used in the assay besides
the D8/17 antibody. We had to switch from a mouse IgM control
from Sigma (St. Louis, Mo.) to one from Caltag because of unreliable
results. In later experiments, we obtained higher values with
the Caltag mouse IgM negative control (concentration, 3 µg/ml)
than with the ATCC D8/17 monoclonal antibody (concentration,
3 µg/ml) (Fig.
3). For this reason, we settled on a mouse
IgM negative control from Dako (3 µg/ml), which has given
us the most reliable results. We also tried several different
secondary FITC-conjugated antibodies before settling on one
from Caltag utilized at 70 µg/ml.
Since the percentages of B cells expressing D8/17 were so high
in the normal subjects and ARF and TD patients, even though
the differences between the groups were not significant, we
decided to look more closely at the total populations of CD19-positive
B cells in these groups. When we reanalyzed the data to determine
simply the percentages of CD19-positive B cells in both patient
groups and controls, we found highly significant increases in
the percentages of CD19-positive B cells in both the ARF and
TD patients compared to those in controls. Eighty-nine normal
controls had a mean percentage of CD19-positive B cells of 11.06%
(SD, ±2.52%), while 23 ARF patients had a mean percentage
of 18.01% (SD, ±3.99%;
P, <0.00000002 against normal
controls). Thirty-three TD patients had a mean percentage of
CD19-positive B cells of 17.70% (SD, ±5.95%;
P, 0.0000005
against normal controls and 0.819 against ARF patients) (Fig.
4). Thus, both patient groups had highly significant increases
in the percentages of CD19-positive B cells compared to normal,
healthy controls. We then looked at a group of patients presenting
with only documented group A streptococcal throat infections
to determine whether the increase in CD19-positive B cells was
related to ARF or TD or whether this was a nonspecific occurrence
related to inflammation. Seventeen pharyngitis patients had
a mean percentage of CD19-positive B cells of 15.25% (SD, ±4.38%;
P, <0.002 against normal controls, 0.054 against ARF patients,
and 0.115 against TD patients) (Fig.
4).
At the time of the D8/17 assay, 11 of the ARF subjects had throat
swabs taken, all of which were negative. Seventeen had ASO and
anti-DNase B titers measured. Ninety-four percent of these subjects
had either an elevated ASO titer or an elevated anti-DNase B
titer; 71% had elevated titers of both antibodies. At the time
that the level of D8/17 was measured, 16 TD subjects had throat
swabs taken and all swabs were negative. Twenty-three subjects
had ASO and anti-DNase B titers measured. Seventy-four percent
had either an elevated ASO titer or an elevated anti-DNase B
titer; 26% had elevated titers of both antibodies. Thus, most
of the ARF and TD patients had cultural or serological evidence
of a recent group A streptococcal infection. Ninety-four percent
of pharyngitis subjects had either an elevated ASO titer or
an elevated anti-DNase B titer; 35% had elevated titers of both
antibodies. When tested again 4 weeks later, 77% showed an increase
in either their ASO or anti-DNase B titers. As shown in Fig.
5, the mean ASO and anti-DNase B titers in the ARF patients
(412 ± 119 IU/ml [ASO] and 1,002 ± 228 [anti-DNase
B]) were higher than the mean titers in TD patients (163 ±
50 IU/ml [ASO] and 267 ± 70 [anti-DNase B]) and acute
pharyngitis patients (153 ± 40 IU/ml [ASO] and 250 ±
59 [anti-DNase B]). Thus, these titers paralleled the elevation
in CD19-positive-B cell numbers (Fig.
4), suggesting that this
response may be a nonspecific one related to a preceding streptococcal
infection.

DISCUSSION
In our laboratory, we have been unable to reproduce the published
D8/17 flow cytometric data for ARF patients. The commercial
D8/17 antibody purchased was found to have very little antibody
content, while other D8/17 antibody preparations, including
ours from the original D8/17 cell line, failed to identify an
increased percentage of D8/17-positive B cells in our ARF patients.
Even employing supernatant obtained from the original D8/17
cell line grown in our laboratory, we were unable to find a
significantly higher percentage of CD19-positive B cells expressing
the D8/17 marker in patients with ARF. One possible reason for
the problems we have had in reproducing the original published
D8/17 data may be that the D8/17 monoclonal antibody has changed.
The D8/17 alloantigen was originally discovered using the serum
from one multiparous woman from Bogota, Colombia. Since this
serum supply was eventually exhausted, the D8/17 monoclonal
antibody was prepared by immunizing mice with the B cells of
multiple ARF patients who were originally determined to be positive
for the alloantigen by using this woman's serum (
20). To our
knowledge, there is no data confirming the identity of the alloantigen
recognized by the woman's serum with the D8/17 monoclonal antibody,
although the patients' cells did react with the monoclonal antibody.
Because we had such difficulties with our first two monoclonal
antibodies, we obtained the original D8/17 ATCC cell line. We
did not find significant differences between ARF patients and
controls with supernatant from this cell line, even though the
antibody performed adequately against the positive and negative
control cell lines. Other laboratories have also noted difficulty
in standardizing the D8/17 assay, particularly in developing
standardized controls, antibody dilutions, and reagents (
6,
10,
15,
16). The exact nature of the alloantigen recognized
by the D8/17 antibody has not been adequately defined, although
Carreno-Manjarrez et al. (
3) have reported that it reacts with
a 95-kDa protein on Western blots. The antigen, to our knowledge,
is not available to determine the specificity of our antibodies.
In fact, Kumar and colleagues (
12) have developed three monoclonal
antibodies by immunizing mice with B cells from patients from
northern India with rheumatic heart disease. They report that
these antibodies have different specificities than the D8/17
monoclonal antibody. Thus, we are unable to define the specificity
of our three D8/17 preparations, but all were derived from the
same initial hybridoma cell lines deposited by Zabriskie in
the ATCC.
Initially, we were very encouraged by our results when we analyzed D8/17 expression as a percentage of total lymphocytes expressing D8/17, since the actual numbers seemed to agree with those published in the literature (4, 17, 19) and yielded highly significant differences between controls and patient groups (J. C. Moore, N. H. Augustine, H. R. Hill, and W. M. McMahon, Abstr. J. Investig. Med., abstr. 49:49A, 2001). Although our histograms looked very similar to those published in the literature, others were reporting their results as the percentage of D8/17-positive B cells, even though they seemed in many cases to be expressing their data as the percentage of D8/17-positive lymphocytes (7). Once our data were reanalyzed to determine the percentage of D8/17-positive, CD19-positive B cells, we could find no significant difference between patient groups and controls.
These results led us to explore the possibility that the differences we were seeing in the percentages of D8/17-positive lymphocytes were actually due to increased numbers of CD19-positive B cells in our patient populations. We went back to our original histograms and determined percentages of CD19-positive B cells in our patient populations and controls. We found that there were highly significant differences in the percentages of CD19-positive B cells in ARF and TD patients compared to those in controls. We believe that these results may shed some light on the discrepancies we and others have noted in results of the flow cytometric D8/17 assay. It is possible that ARF and TD patients do not actually have an increase in the percentage of B cells expressing the D8/17 antigen but that rather they simply have an increase in the number of CD19-positive B cells in their peripheral blood, as has been described in other autoimmune disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis (13) and even, in one report, in ARF (2). The fact that most of our ARF and TD patients had serological evidence of a recent group A streptococcal infection and that patients with acute streptococcal pharyngitis also had elevated percentages in their peripheral blood suggests that this is a nonspecific phenomenon related to infection or postinfection inflammatory responses. Although CD19-positive B cells were measured acutely in only the pharyngitis patients, one may expect that the percentages of these cells would increase even more several weeks out from the infection, like those in ARF and/or TD patients, since the CD19-positive-B cell numbers shown in Fig. 4 paralleled the elevations in ASO and anti-DNase B titers shown in Fig. 5. We are currently attempting to monitor the patients in each group serially for several months, which we hope will give us a better indication of how long this immunological response may last.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This research was supported in part by U.S. Public Health Service
grant MH58868 and NIAID contract NO1-AO-2274.
We thank John Zabriskie for his antibody and technical advice.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Pathology, University of Utah School of Medicine, 30 N. 1900 E. Rm 5B114, Salt Lake City, UT 84132. Phone: (801) 581-5873. Fax: (801) 585-1265. E-mail:
harry.hill{at}path.utah.edu.


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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, March 2004, p. 330-336, Vol. 11, No. 2
1071-412X/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/CDLI.11.2.330-336.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.