scholarly journals 292 Regulatory T cell is essential for deletion of autoreactive CD4+ T cells to desmoglein 3 in peripheral tolerance

2017 ◽  
Vol 137 (10) ◽  
pp. S243
Author(s):  
H. Iriki ◽  
H. Takahashi ◽  
N. Wada ◽  
M. Amagai
Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 693-693
Author(s):  
Krystalyn E Hudson ◽  
Jeanne Hendrickson ◽  
Chantel M Cadwell ◽  
Neal N Iwakoshi ◽  
James C. Zimring

Abstract Abstract 693 Introduction: Breakdown of humoral tolerance to red blood cell (RBC) antigens can result in autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA), a severe and potentially fatal disease. The pathogenesis of AIHA is poorly understood. To investigate the baseline biology of tolerance to self-antigens expressed on RBCs, we utilized a murine transgenic mouse with RBC-specific expression of a model antigen consisting of a triple fusion protein of hen egg lysozyme (HEL), ovalbumin (Ova), and human blood group molecule Duffy; HEL-OVA-Duffy (HOD mouse). Methods: Wild-type C57BL/6 (B6) mice or HOD mice (on a B6 background) were immunized with HEL/CFA or OVA/CFA to test immune responses to antigens contained within HOD. Some animals were immunized with peptides as opposed to whole protein. Anti-HOD antibodies were quantified by indirect immunofluorescence using HOD RBCs as targets. Anti-HEL IgG was quantified by ELISA and anti-HEL secreting B cells were enumerated by ELISPOT. CD4+ T cell responses were assessed by tetramer staining and tetramer pull-down assays using I-Ab-OVA-329-337/326-334. T cell tolerance was specifically broken by adoptive transfer of OT-II CD4+ T cells into HOD mice (OT-II T cells recognize OVA323-339 presented by I-Ab). Effects of HOD antigen expression on B cell development were evaluated by crossing the HOD mouse with an anti-HEL BCR knockin mouse (SwHEL mouse) that is capable of normal class switching. Results: Immunization of B6 mice with OVA/CFA induced high titer antibodies reactive with HOD RBCs; in contrast, no anti-HOD was detected in HOD mice immunized with OVA/CFA. Similarly, no anti-HEL was detected in HOD mice immunized with HEL/CFA, whereas wild-type B6 mice had high anti-HEL titers (p<0.05). These data demonstrate overall humoral tolerance to the HOD antigen. Using pull-down assays, OVA-tetramer reactive T cells were detected in both B6 and HOD mice, with similar endogenous frequencies (mean numbers are 40 and 53 T cells, respectively; at least 6 mice analyzed), suggesting that central tolerance did not eliminate HOD reactive T cells. However, upon immunization with OVA peptide, B6 but not HOD mice had a detectable expansion of OVA-tetramer reactive CD4+ T cells, indicating that peripheral tolerance was preventing HOD autoreactive CD4+ T cells from participating in an immune response. To assess B cell tolerance to the HOD antigen, T cell tolerance was circumvented through adoptive transfer or OTII splenocytes (specific for the OVA323-339 peptide) into HOD mice. Anti-HEL autoantibodies were detected in HOD mice but not control B6 mice (p<0.001). Antibody production correlated with a 10–20 fold increase of anti-HEL antibody secreting cells, as determined by ELISPOT. Autoantibody production in HOD mice was not due to passenger B cells from the OTII donor, an artifact of excess CD4+ T cell number, or bystander activation as no autoantibodies were observed upon adoptive transfer with OTIIs on a Rag knockout background, irrelevant CD4+ T cells from SMARTA mice, or activated CD4+ T cells from TCR75 mice. To test the effects of HOD antigen expression on development of autoreactive B cells, HOD mice were crossed with SwHEL BCR transgenic mice (that express anti-HEL) and the F1 mice were analyzed. HEL-reactive B cells were visualized using multimeric HEL conjugated to allophycocyanin. In HOD-SwHEL+ mice, approximately 46±14% of immature bone marrow B cells were reactive with HEL, compared to 15±12% in HOD+SwHEL+ mice (p=0.043, 3 independent experiments, 5 mice total). Conclusions: These data demonstrate that tolerance to an RBC specific antigen is complete in the CD4+ T cell, but not the B cell compartment. CD4+ T cell tolerance appears to be more an effect of peripheral tolerance than central deletion, as OVA-tetramer reactive CD4+ T cells were visible in HOD mice but did not activate upon immunization with their cognate antigen. In contrast, while the HODxSwHEL F1 mice demonstrate that some B cell tolerance to HOD occurs, the induction of autoantibodies by introducing CD4+ autoreactive T cells (OT-II) demonstrates that B cell tolerance to the HOD antigen is incomplete in HOD mice. Together, these data suggest that a breakdown in T cell tolerance is all that is required for the pathogenesis of AIHA. As the T cell tolerance appears not to be deletional, it is predicted that environmental factors leading to a breakdown in peripheral tolerance of CD4+ T cells would be sufficient to induce AIHA. Disclosures: Zimring: Immucor Inc,: Research Funding.


1998 ◽  
Vol 188 (4) ◽  
pp. 651-659 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey C. Rathmell ◽  
Sylvie Fournier ◽  
Bennett C. Weintraub ◽  
James P. Allison ◽  
Christopher C. Goodnow

Peripheral tolerance mechanisms normally prevent delivery of T cell help to anergic self-reactive B cells that accumulate in the T zones of spleen and lymph nodes. Chronic exposure to self-antigens desensitizes B cell antigen receptor (BCR) signaling on anergic B cells so that they are not stimulated into clonal expansion by CD4+ T cells but instead are eliminated by Fas (CD95)-induced apoptosis. Because a range of BCR-induced signals and responses are repressed in anergic B cells, it is not known which of these are critical to regulate for Fas-mediated peripheral tolerance. Display of the costimulatory molecule, B7.2 (CD86), represents a potentially important early response to acute BCR engagement that is poorly induced by antigen on anergic B cells. We show here that restoring B7.2 expression on tolerant B cells using a constitutively expressed B7.2 transgene is sufficient to prevent Fas-mediated deletion and to trigger extensive T cell–dependent clonal expansion and autoantibody secretion in the presence of specific T cells. Dysregulated expression of B7.2 on tolerant B cells caused a more extreme reversal of peripheral tolerance than that caused by defects in Fas or Fas ligand, and resulted in T cell–dependent clonal expansion and antibody secretion comparable in magnitude to that made by foreign antigen-specific B cells. These findings demonstrate that repression of B7.2 is critical to eliminate autoreactive B cells by Fas in B cell–T cell interactions. The possible role of B7.2 dysregulation in systemic autoimmune diseases is discussed.


2013 ◽  
Vol 190 (10) ◽  
pp. 5057-5064 ◽  
Author(s):  
Angela X. Zhou ◽  
Lina Kozhaya ◽  
Hodaka Fujii ◽  
Derya Unutmaz

Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 115 (11) ◽  
pp. 2186-2195 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregory F. Sonnenberg ◽  
Paul R. Mangan ◽  
Natalie A. Bezman ◽  
Debora R. Sekiguchi ◽  
Eline T. Luning Prak ◽  
...  

Abstract Central and peripheral tolerance is required to prevent immune responses to self-antigens. We now present a mouse model in which wild-type (WT) SH2 domain-containing leukocyte phosphoprotein of 76 kDa (SLP-76) has been constitutively targeted to the membrane, where CD4+ T cells become spontaneously dysregulated and develop an inflammatory phenotype. Mice bearing membrane-targeted SLP-76 (MTS) have a partial T-cell lymphopenia and impaired signaling though the mature T-cell receptor. The CD4+ T cells that develop in these mice possess an activated-like phenotype and are skewed toward the inflammatory TH1 and TH17 lineages. MTS mice also spontaneously develop autoantibodies at an early age. To rule out abnormal thymic selection as the sole cause of the MTS phenotype, we expressed WT SLP-76 along with the MTS followed by deletion of the WT allele in peripheral T cells. The peripheral MTS-expressing T cells demonstrate skewed cytokine responses when transferred into lymphopenic hosts. Thus, the abnormal effector T-cell phenotype still occurs in the presence of preserved central and peripheral tolerance, suggesting that diminished T-cell receptor signaling can promote skewed T-cell responses.


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