Treatment with nonmitogenic anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody induces CD4+ T cell unresponsiveness and functional reversal of established experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis |
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Authors: | Kohm Adam P Williams Julie S Bickford Allison L McMahon Jeffrey S Chatenoud Lucienne Bach Jean-François Bluestone Jeffrey A Miller Stephen D |
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Affiliation: | Department of Microbiology-Immunology and Interdepartmental Immunobiology Center, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, IL 60611, USA. |
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Abstract: | In vivo administration of anti-CD3 Ab induces both immune tolerance and undesirable side-effects resulting from nonspecific proinflammatory cytokine production. In the current study, we investigated the therapeutic potential of two structurally altered forms of the anti-CD3 Ab in ameliorating established experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. Administration of either a chimeric (NM-IgG3) or digestion product (NM-F(ab')2) form of the anti-CD3 Ab during established experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis conferred significant protection from clinical disease progression and was associated with decreased Ag-specific T cell proliferation, cytokine production, and CNS inflammation. Interestingly, while this protection correlated with an increase in the frequency of CD4(+)CD25(+) regulatory T cells, neither prior depletion of regulatory T cells nor anti-TGF-beta treatment abrogated the treatment's efficacy. Importantly, both treatments induced normal levels of intracellular Ca(2+)-flux, but significantly diminished levels of TCR signaling. Consequent to this decreased level of TCR-mediated signaling were alterations in the level of apoptosis and CD4+ T cell trafficking resulting in a profound lymphopenia. Collectively, these results indicate that nonmitogenic anti-CD3 directly induces a state of immune unresponsiveness in primed pathogenic autoreactive effector cells via mechanisms that may involve the induction of T cell tolerance, apoptosis, and/or alterations in cell trafficking. |
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