Cutting edge: inflammatory signals drive organ-specific autoimmunity to normally cross-tolerizing endogenous antigen

V Vezys, L Lefrançois - The Journal of Immunology, 2002 - journals.aai.org
V Vezys, L Lefrançois
The Journal of Immunology, 2002journals.aai.org
Links have been observed between infections and the development of autoimmunity.
Proposed explanations include activation of self-Ag-bearing APC. Using a model system in
which transgenic OVA is expressed in enterocytes, we showed that CD8 T cell recognition of
cross-presented Ag in gut-associated lymph nodes was tolerogenic. However, concomitant
infection with vesicular stomatitis virus encoding OVA abrogated tolerance and induced
disease. We now show that following transfer of naive OT-I T cells, the addition of wild-type …
Abstract
Links have been observed between infections and the development of autoimmunity. Proposed explanations include activation of self-Ag-bearing APC. Using a model system in which transgenic OVA is expressed in enterocytes, we showed that CD8 T cell recognition of cross-presented Ag in gut-associated lymph nodes was tolerogenic. However, concomitant infection with vesicular stomatitis virus encoding OVA abrogated tolerance and induced disease. We now show that following transfer of naive OT-I T cells, the addition of wild-type vesicular stomatitis virus, oral cholera toxin, or CD40 triggering can induce intestinal disease in transgenic mice. Tissue damage accompanied dramatic increases in cytokine release by activated OT-I cells in the intestine. The data indicated that products of antigenically unrelated infections can combine with cross-presented self-Ags on APC to prime autoaggressiveness, independent of additional Ag release. These results help explain how diverse pathogens, lacking any homology to self-proteins, could be causative agents in induction of organ-specific autoimmunity.
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