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1.
The anti-glomerular basement membrane (GBM) Ab has been regarded as a prototypical example of pathogenic autoantibodies. However, the mechanism for elicitation of this Ab remains unknown. In the present paper, we report that the Ab to diverse GBM Ags was induced by a single nephritogenic T cell epitope in a rat model. The T cell epitope pCol(28-40) of noncollagen domain 1 of collagen type IV alpha3 chain not only uniformly induced severe glomerulonephritis but also elicited anti-GBM Ab in 76% of the immunized rats after prominent glomerular injury. Furthermore, we demonstrated that the anti-GBM Ab was not related to the peptidic B cell epitope nested in pCol(28-40); that is, 1) elimination of the B cell epitope, either by substitution of the critical residues of the B cell epitope or by truncation, failed to abrogate anti-GBM Ab production, and 2) the anti-GBM Ab, eluted from the diseased kidneys, reacted only with native GBM, but not with pCol(28-40). Confocal microscopy and immunoprecipitation further demonstrated that the eluted anti-GBM Ab recognized conformational B cell epitope(s) of multiple native GBM proteins. We conclude that autoantibody response to diverse native GBM Ags was induced by a single nephritogenic T cell epitope. Thus, anti-GBM Ab may actually be a consequence of T cell-mediated glomerulonephritis.  相似文献   

2.
Goodpasture antigen, the non‐collagenous domain of α3 chain of type IV collagen [α3(IV)NC1], is the target antigen of anti‐glomerular basement membrane (GBM) antibodies. The pathogenicity of T cell epitopes is not elucidated clearly. In this study, we aim to define the nephritogenic T cell epitopes and its critical amino acid residues. Twenty‐four overlapping linear peptides were synthesized covering the whole sequence of human α3(IV)NC1. Wistar–Kyoto rats were immunized with linear peptides, and experimental autoimmune glomerulonephritis was evaluated. Critical amino acid was identified by the loss of nephritogenic function after each amino acid substitution by alanine. Of the 24 peptides, P14 (α3127‐148) could induce 90.5% (19/21) of WKY rats developing anti‐GBM glomerulonephritis with proteinuria, elevated serum urea and creatinine, IgG linear deposit on GBM and substantial (in average 82.4 ± 5.6%) crescent formation in glomeruli. Lymphocytes of immunized rats proliferated in response to α3127‐148 and α3(IV)NC1 in vitro. Sera of these rats recognized α3127‐148 and later on together with intact human α3(IV)NC1. Antibodies towards α3127‐148 and intact α3(IV)NC1 could also be detected from the kidney elutes. These antibodies showed no cross‐reaction with each other, which implies intramolecular epitope spreading during disease progress. After sequential amino acid substitution, the α3127‐148 with substitution of tryptophan136, isoleucine137, leucine139 or tryptophan140 lost its nephritogenicity. Human α3127‐148 is a nephritogenic T cell epitope in WKY rats, with the critical amino acids as W136I137xL139W140. These findings might facilitate future investigation on microbial aetiology and potential specific immunotherapy of anti‐GBM disease.  相似文献   

3.
The nephritogenic antigen that induces antiglomerular basement membrane antibody-induced glomerulonephritis (anti-GBM nephritis) in rats was isolated from collagenase-solubilized bovine renal basement membranes. Purification was achieved using antibody-coupled affinity columns which were originally used for the purification of trypsin-solubilized nephritogenic antigen (Sado et al. 1984a). The nephritogenic antigen was a heteropolymer composed of P2 (Mr 28 kDa) and P3 (Mr 30 kDa) polypeptides as monomers and their dimers in sodium-dodecyl-sulfate (SDS) polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The P3 polypeptide was considered to be the nephritogenic epitope, since a fraction composed of the P2 polypeptide alone was not nephritogenic. The properties of the nephritogenic epitope were the same as those of the Goodpasture epitope (M2*), which is a noncollagenous domain of the alpha 3 chain of type IV collagen (Butkowski et al. 1985; Saus et al. 1988), indicating that the nephritogenic antigen is the same as the Goodpasture antigen.  相似文献   

4.
Glomerulonephritis is believed to result commonly from Ab-mediated glomerular injury. However, Ab-associated mechanisms alone cannot explain many cases of human glomerulonephritis. We developed a rat model of human anti-glomerular basement membrane (GBM) disease to investigate T cell and Ab response, and their associations with the disease. A single immunization of highly denatured recombinant mouse collagen IV alpha3 chain noncollagen domain 1 (rCol4alpha3NC1) induced severe glomerulonephritis in 100% of Wistar Kyoto rats, 33% of which died of this disease around day 35 postimmunization. The renal pathology demonstrated widespread glomerular damage and a mononuclear cell infiltration within the interstitial tissue. T cells from immunized rats responded not only to rCol4alpha3NC1, but also to isolated rat GBM. Sera Abs to rCol4alpha3NC1 were detectable in 100% of the rats, but only 20% of the rats had low levels of Ab to isolated rat GBM by Western blot, and none by immunofluorescence. Furthermore, IgG/M binding to or C3 deposition on endogenous GBM in immunized rats were not detected in most of the experimental rats, and showed no statistical correlation with disease severity. Additionally, no electronic dense deposition in the glomeruli was detected in all rats. Those data revealed a disassociation between the disease and anti-GBM Ab. T cell-mediated mechanisms, which are currently under our investigation, may be responsible for the glomerular disease.  相似文献   

5.
Goodpasture (GP) autoimmune disease is caused by autoantibodies to type IV collagen that bind to the glomerular basement membrane, causing rapidly progressing glomerulonephritis. The immunodominant GP(A) autoepitope is encompassed by residues 17-31 (the E(A) region) within the noncollagenous (NC1) domain of the alpha 3(IV) chain. The GP epitope is cryptic in the NC1 hexamer complex that occurs in the type IV collagen network found in tissues and inaccessible to autoantibodies unless the hexamer dissociates. In contrast, the epitope for the Mab3 monoclonal antibody is also located within the E(A) region, but is fully accessible in the hexamer complex. In this study, the identity of residues that compose the GP(A) autoepitope was determined, and the molecular basis of its cryptic nature was explored. This was achieved using site-directed mutagenesis to exchange the alpha3(IV) residues in the E(A) region with the corresponding residues of the homologous but non-immunoreactive alpha1(IV) NC1 domain and then comparing the reactivity of the mutated chimeras with GP(A) and Mab3 antibodies. It was shown that three hydrophobic residues (Ala(18), Ile(19), and Val(27)) and Pro(28) are critical for the GP(A) autoepitope, whereas two hydrophilic residues (Ser(21) and Ser(31)) along with Pro(28) are critical for the Mab3 epitope. These results suggest that the cryptic nature of the GP(A) autoepitope is the result of quaternary interactions of the alpha 3, alpha 4, and alpha 5 NC1 domains of the hexamer complex that bury the one or more hydrophobic residues. These findings provide critical information for understanding the etiology and pathogenesis of the disease as well as for designing drugs that would mimic the epitope and thus block the binding of GP autoantibodies to autoantigen.  相似文献   

6.

Background

The autoantigen of anti-glomerular basement membrane (GBM) disease has been identified as the non-collagenous domain 1 of α3 chain of type IV collagen, α3(IV)NC1. Our previous study revealed a peptide on α3(IV)NC1 as a major linear epitope for B cells and potentially nephrogenic, designated as P14 (α3129-150). This peptide has also been proven to be the epitope of auto-reactive T cells in anti-GBM patients. This study was aimed to further characterize the critical motif of P14.

Methods

16 patients with anti-GBM disease and positive anti-P14 antibodies were enrolled. A set of truncated and alanine substituted peptides derived from P14 were synthesized. Circulating antibodies against the peptides were detected by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA).

Results

We found that all sera with anti-P14 antibodies reacted with the 13-mer sequence in the C-terminus of P14 (P14c) exclusively. The level of antibodies against P14 was highly correlated with the level of antibodies against P14c (r=0.970, P<0.001). P14c was the core immunogenic region and the amino acid sequence (ISLWKGFSFIMFT) was highly hydrophobic. Each amino acid residue in P14c was sequentially replaced by alanine. Three residues of glycine142, phenylalanine143, and phenylalanine145 were identified crucial for antibody binding based on the remarkable decline (P<0.001) of antibody reaction after each residue replacement.

Conclusions

We defined GFxF (α3142, 143,145) as the critical motif of P14. It may provide some clues for understanding the etiology of anti-GBM disease.  相似文献   

7.
Peptide binding and lymph node T cell activation studies have been used to characterize T cell recognition of an encephalitogenic T cell autoantigen from myelin basic protein in (PL/J x SJL)F1 mice. Amino acids that determine interactions with either the restriction element of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) or the encephalitogenic T cell receptor are defined. This information enables the design of peptides that bind MHC yet do not cross-react with the autoantigen. A peptide analog of the encephalitogenic epitope is shown to be "heteroclitic" for MHC binding and activation of encephalitogenic T cells in vitro. This analog is not immunogenic for encephalitogenic T cells in vivo and is shown to inhibit disease that is induced by the autoantigen itself.  相似文献   

8.
The Goodpasture (GP) autoantigen has been identified as the alpha3(IV) collagen chain, one of six homologous chains designated alpha1-alpha6 that comprise type IV collagen (Hudson, B. G., Reeders, S. T., and Tryggvason, K. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 26033-26036). In this study, chimeric proteins were used to map the location of the major conformational, disulfide bond-dependent GP autoepitope(s) that has been previously localized to the noncollagenous (NC1) domain of alpha3(IV) chain. Fourteen alpha1/alpha3 NC1 chimeras were constructed by substituting one or more short sequences of alpha3(IV)NC1 at the corresponding positions in the non-immunoreactive alpha1(IV)NC1 domain and expressed in mammalian cells for proper folding. The interaction between the chimeras and eight GP sera was assessed by both direct and inhibition enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Two chimeras, C2 containing residues 17-31 of alpha3(IV)NC1 and C6 containing residues 127-141 of alpha3(IV)NC1, bound autoantibodies, as did combination chimeras containing these regions. The epitope(s) that encompasses these sequences is immunodominant, showing strong reactivity with all GP sera and accounting for 50-90% of the autoantibody reactivity toward alpha3(IV)NC1. The conformational nature of the epitope(s) in the C2 and C6 chimeras was established by reduction of the disulfide bonds and by PEPSCAN analysis of overlapping 12-mer peptides derived from alpha1- and alpha3(IV)NC1 sequences. The amino acid sequences 17-31 and 127-141 in alpha3(IV)NC1 have thus been shown to contain the critical residues of one or two disulfide bond-dependent conformational autoepitopes that bind GP autoantibodies.  相似文献   

9.
The noncollagenous (NC1) domain hexamer of glomerular basement membrane (GBM) collagen is composed of a multiplicity of monomeric and dimeric subunits, and specific subunits are the targets for anti-GBM autoantibodies of patients with Goodpasture (GP) syndrome. The identity of GBM monomers has been established and the alpha 3(IV)NC1 monomer identified as the one that binds GP antibodies (Gunwar, S., Saus, J., Noelken, M. E., and Hudson, B. G. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 5466-5469). In the present study, the chain origin of 25 dimeric components and the identity of those that bound the anti-GBM antibodies from two GP patients were determined. This was accomplished by NH2-terminal sequence analysis and immunoblotting analysis of dimeric components that were resolved by two-dimensional electrophoresis in combination with high pressure liquid chromatography. The results revealed that (a) the components are mainly homodimers of the NC1 domains of alpha 1, alpha 2, alpha 3, alpha 4, and probably alpha 5 chains of collagen IV, reflecting a specificity of promoter-promoter association and (b) each homodimer had several size and charge isoforms. The GP antibodies bound exclusively to both alpha 3(IV)NC1 monomers and dimers and not to other basement membrane constituents. These findings provided new insights about the structure of GBM collagen and together with our previous findings firmly established the alpha 3(IV) chain as the target for the anti-GBM antibodies that mediate glomerulonephritis and pulmonary hemorrhage in patients with Goodpasture syndrome.  相似文献   

10.
Rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis in Goodpasture disease is mediated by autoantibodies binding to the non-collagenous NC1 domain of alpha3(IV) collagen in the glomerular basement membrane. Goodpasture epitopes in the native autoantigen are cryptic (sequestered) within the NC1 hexamers of the alpha3alpha4alpha5(IV) collagen network. The biochemical mechanism for crypticity and exposure for autoantibody binding is not known. We now report that crypticity is a feature of the quaternary structure of two distinct subsets of alpha3alpha4alpha5(IV) NC1 hexamers: autoantibody-reactive M-hexamers containing only monomer subunits and autoantibody-impenetrable D-hexamers composed of both dimer and monomer subunits. Goodpasture antibodies only breach the quaternary structure of M-hexamers, unmasking the cryptic epitopes, whereas D-hexamers are resistant to autoantibodies under native conditions. The epitopes of D-hexamers are structurally sequestered by dimer reinforcement of the quaternary complex, which represents a new molecular solution for conferring immunologic privilege to a potential autoantigen. Dissociation of non-reinforced M-alpha3alpha4alpha5(IV) hexamers by Goodpasture antibodies is a novel mechanism whereby pathogenic autoantibodies gain access to cryptic B cell epitopes. These findings provide fundamental new insights into immune privilege and the molecular mechanisms underlying the pathogenesis of human autoimmune Goodpasture disease.  相似文献   

11.
Transgenic mice overexpressing IFN-γ in the epidermis develop an inflammatory skin disease resembling cutaneous lupus erythematosus shortly after birth. By 3 months of age, most female transgenics develop a lupus-like syndrome characterised by production of IgG anti-dsDNA, antihistone and antinucleosome autoantibodies. The autoantibodies are nephritogenic, with one-third of females developing a severe immune complex mediated glomerulonephritis. Analysis of these transgenics suggests that pathogenic autoantibodies arise via an antigen-driven T-cell-dependent mechanism with apoptotic keratinocytes acting as a potential source of autoantigen. The mechanism of autoantibody production in IFN-γ transgenics may be relevant to human lupus and is consistent with a central role for cutaneous T cells in the pathogenesis of systemic lupus erythematosus in man.  相似文献   

12.
In the (SWR x NZB)F1 mouse model of lupus, we previously localized the critical autoepitopes for nephritogenic autoantibody-inducing Th cells in the core histones of nucleosomes at aa positions 10-33 of H2B and 16-39 and 71-94 of H4. A brief therapy with the peptides administered i.v. to 3-mo-old prenephritic (SWR x NZB)F1 mice that were already producing pathogenic autoantibodies markedly delayed the onset of severe lupus nephritis. Strikingly, chronic therapy with the peptides injected into 18-mo-old (SWR x NZB)F1 mice with established glomerulonephritis prolonged survival and even halted the progression of renal disease. Remarkably, tolerization with any one of the nucleosomal peptides impaired autoimmune T cell help, inhibiting the production of multiple pathogenic autoantibodies. However, cytokine production or proliferative responses to the peptides were not grossly changed by the therapy. Moreover, suppressor T cells were not detected in the treated mice. Most interestingly, the best therapeutic effect was obtained with nucleosomal peptide H416-39, which had a tolerogenic effect not only on autoimmune Th cells, but autoimmune B cells as well, because this peptide contained both T and B cell autoepitopes. These studies show that the pathogenic T and B cells of lupus, despite intrinsic defects in activation thresholds, are still susceptible to autoantigen-specific tolerogens.  相似文献   

13.
Molecular interactions between TCR and its natural ligand, in the presence of costimulatory signals, elicit T cell effector functions, whereas subtle changes in the structure of antigenic peptides may induce only selected T cell effector function including anergy. In this study, we have investigated the immunological activity of an altered TCR ligand (p 2, 28-40A34,36) derived from the immunodominant T cell epitope of the group 2 allergen of house dust mite, in which residues at positions 34 and 36 were substituted by alanine. Elevated IFN-gamma synthesis was induced by equimolar concentrations of the analogue compared with native peptide (p 2, 28-40) and was paralleled by increased down-regulation of cell surface CD3. IL-5 and IL-10 production exhibit the same sensitivity to both peptides, implying that the induction of T cell effector functions are not all proportional to TCR occupancy. Both native peptide and the analogue bound to MHC class II (DRB1*1101) molecules with similar affinities. Furthermore, p 2, 28-40A34,36 induced T cell anergy at lower concentrations than native peptide. During the induction of anergy, TGF-beta production was comparable for both peptides, whereas IL-10 secretion was markedly increased but more so in response to p 2, 28-40A34,36. Membrane expression of costimulatory ligands CD80 and CD86 was similar for native peptide and p 2, 28-40A34,36 and increased in activation, whereas only CD86 was elevated during anergy. The modulation of T cell effector function with altered TCR ligands may have practical applications in reprogramming allergic inflammatory responses through the induction of T cell anergy and/or the promotion of Th1 cytokines.  相似文献   

14.
Goodpasture disease is a prototype autoimmune disease characterized by the formation of autoantibodies against the heterotrimeric basement membrane collagen type IV, which causes a rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis. The pathogenic antibody response is directed to the non-collagenous (NC1) domain of the alpha3 chain of type IV collagen (alpha3(IV)NC1), but not to the homologous region of the alpha1(IV)NC1. To identify the conformation-dependent immunodominant epitope on the alpha3(IV)NC1, a variety of recombinant NC1 domains were constructed by replacing single residues of alpha3(IV) with the corresponding amino acids from the nonreactive alpha1(IV) chain. Replacement mutations were identified that completely destroyed the Goodpasture epitope in the alpha3(IV) chain. Based on the identification of these critical positions, the epitope was finally reconstructed within the frame of the alpha1(IV) chain. The substitution of nine discontinuous positions in the alpha1(IV)NC1 with amino acid residues from the alpha3 chain resulted in a recombinant construct that was recognized by all patients' sera (n = 20) but by none of the sera from healthy controls (n = 10). This provides, for the first time, the molecular characterization of a single immunodominant conformational epitope recognized by pathogenic autoantibodies in a human autoimmune disease, representing the basis for the development of new epitope-specific strategies in the treatment of Goodpasture disease.  相似文献   

15.
Anti-glomerular basement membrane (GBM) antibody nephritis is caused by an autoimmune or alloimmune reaction to the NC1 domains of alpha3alpha4alpha5(IV) collagen. Some patients with X-linked Alport syndrome (XLAS) develop post-transplant nephritis mediated by pathogenic anti-GBM alloantibodies to collagen IV chains present in the renal allograft but absent from the tissues of the patient. In this work, the epitopes targeted by alloantibodies from these patients were identified and characterized. All XLAS alloantibodies recognized conformational epitopes in the NC1 domain of alpha5(IV) collagen, which were mapped using chimeric alpha1/alpha5 NC1 domains expressed in mammalian cells. Allograft-eluted alloantibodies mainly targeted two conformational alloepitopes mapping to alpha5NC1 residues 1-45 and 114-168. These regions also encompassed the major epitopes of circulating XLAS alloantibodies, which in some patients additionally targeted alpha5NC1 residues 169-229. Both kidney-eluted and circulating alloantibodies to alpha5NC1 distinctively targeted epitopes accessible in the alpha3alpha4alpha5NC1 hexamers of human GBM, unlike anti-GBM autoantibodies, which targeted sequestered alpha3NC1 epitopes. The results identify two immunodominant alpha5NC1 epitopes as major alloantigenic sites of alpha3alpha4alpha5(IV) collagen specifically implicated in the pathogenesis of post-transplant nephritis in XLAS patients. The contrast between the accessibility of these alloepitopes and the crypticity of autoepitopes indicates that distinct molecular forms of antigen may initiate the immunopathogenic processes in the two forms of anti-GBM disease.  相似文献   

16.
The autoantibodies of patients with Goodpasture syndrome are primarily targeted to the noncollagenous (NC1) domain of the alpha 3(IV) chain of basement membrane collagen (Saus, J., Wieslander, J., Langeveld, J. P. M., Quinones, S., and Hudson, B. G. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 13374-13380). In the present study, the location of the Goodpasture epitope in human alpha 3NC1 was determined, and its structure was partially characterized. This was achieved by identification of regions of alpha 3NC1 which are candidates for the epitope and which are structurally unique among the five known homologous NC1 domains (alpha 1-alpha 5); amino acids that are critical for Goodpasture antibody binding, by selective chemical modifications; and regions that are critical for Goodpasture antibody binding, by synthesis of 12 alpha 3NC1 peptides and measurement of their antibody binding capacity. The carboxyl-terminal region, residues 198-233, was identified as the most likely region for the epitope. By experiment, lysine and cysteine were identified as critical amino acids for antibody binding. Three synthetic peptides were found to inhibit Goodpasture antibody binding to alpha 3NC1 markedly: a 36-mer (residues 198-233), a 12-mer (residues 222-233), and a 5-mer (residues 229-233). Together, these results strongly indicate that the Goodpasture epitope is localized to the carboxyl-terminal region of alpha 3NC1, encompassing residues 198-233 as the primary antibody interaction site and that its structure is discontinuous. These findings provide a conceptual framework for future studies to elucidate a more complete epitope structure by sequential replacement of residues encompassing the epitope using cDNA expression products and peptides synthesized chemically.  相似文献   

17.
We previously showed concordance between Goodpasture syndrome antibody binding and production of experimental glomerulonephritis using human chimeric proteins. We now examine a more limited amino-terminal region of alpha3(IV) non-collagenous domain (NC1) and the impact of single amino acid (AA) mutations of this region on glomerulonephritis induction. Rats were immunized with collagenase-solubilized glomerular basement membrane (csGBM), D3, an alpha1(IV)NC1 chimeric protein with 69 AA of alpha3(IV)NC1 (binds Goodpasture sera), D4, the D3 construct shortened by 4 AA (non-binding), P9, P10, single AA mutants (non-binding), and S2, alpha1(IV)NC1 with 9 AA of alpha3(IV)NC1 (binding). All rats immunized with csGBM and S2 and 50% of D3 rats developed glomerulonephritis. csGBM rats had intense GBM-bound IgG deposits, but S2 and D3 rats had minimal deposits. None of the D4, P9, or P10 rats developed glomerulonephritis. Lymphocytes from nephritic rats proliferated with csGBM, S2, and D3, but not with D4, P9, or P10. Discrete segments of alpha3(IV)NC1 within the alpha1(IV)NC1 backbone can induce glomerulonephritis. Single AA mutations within that epitope render the antigen unresponsive to Goodpasture sera and incapable of inducing glomerulonephritis. These studies support the concordance of glomerulonephritis inductivity and Goodpasture serum binding. Further, they define a critical limited AA sequence within alpha3(IV)NC1 of nine or fewer AA, which confers nephritogenicity to the nonnephritogenic alpha1(IV)NC1 without in vivo antibody binding. This region may be a T-cell epitope responsible for induction of glomerulonephritis in this model in rats and Goodpasture syndrome in man.  相似文献   

18.
Myocarditis is a common cause of dilated cardiomyopathy leading to heart failure. Chronic stages of myocarditis may be initiated by autoimmune responses to exposed cardiac Ags after myocyte damage. Cardiac myosin, a heart autoantigen, induced experimental autoimmune myocarditis (EAM) in susceptible animals. Although cardiac myosin-induced myocarditis has been reported in Lewis rats, the main pathogenic epitope has not been identified. Using overlapping synthetic peptides of the S2 region of human cardiac myosin, we identified an amino acid sequence, S2-16 (residues 1052-1076), that induced severe myocarditis in Lewis rats. The myocarditic epitope was localized to a truncated S2-16 peptide (residues 1052-1073), which contained a sequence identical in human and rat cardiac myosin. The S2-16 peptide was not myocarditic for three other strains of rats, in which the lack of myocarditis was accompanied by the absence of strong S2-16-specific lymphocyte responses in vitro. For Lewis rats, S2-16 was characterized as a cryptic epitope of cardiac myosin because it did not recall lymphocyte and Ab responses after immunization with cardiac myosin. Lymphocytes from S2-16 immunized rats recognized not only S2-16, but also peptides in the S2-28 region. Furthermore, peptide S2-28 was the dominant epitope recognized by T cells from cardiac myosin immunized rats. S2-16 was presented by Lewis rat MHC class II molecules, and myocarditis induction was associated with an up-regulation of inflammatory cytokine production. S2-16-induced EAM provides a defined animal model to investigate mechanisms of EAM and modulation of immune responses to prevent autoimmune myocarditis.  相似文献   

19.
Anti-glomerular basement membrane (GBM) Ab-induced glomerulonephritis (GN) at late stage is thought to be mediated by T cells. However, signaling pathways of T cells that are involved in the development of anti-GBM Ab-induced GN are unclear. We have recently established transgenic mice expressing Smad7, an inhibitor of TGF-beta signaling, in mature T cells, where signaling by TGF-beta was blocked specifically in T cells. In this study, we showed that anti-GBM Ab-induced GN was suppressed in several measures in the transgenic mice including the severity of glomerular changes, proteinuria, renal function, and CD4 T cell infiltration into the glomeruli without down-regulation of CD62 ligand (CD62L) (L-selectin) expression on CD4 T cells. Furthermore, treatment with the soluble fusion protein of CD62L and IgG enhanced anti-GBM Ab-induced GN. These findings indicated that blockade of TGF-beta signaling in T cells prevented the development of anti-GBM Ab-induced GN. Because CD62L on T cells appears to be inhibitory for the development of anti-GBM Ab-induced GN, persistent expression of CD62L on CD4 T cells may explain, at least in part, the suppression of anti-GBM Ab-induced GN in the transgenic mice. Our findings suggest that the development of anti-GBM Ab-induced GN requires TGF-beta/Smad signaling in T cells.  相似文献   

20.
Susceptibility to experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis (EAMG), which is induced in mice by injection of purified Torpedo nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (TAChR), is influenced by the I-A locus products, which restrict presentation of AChR Th epitopes. The bm12 mutation of the I-Ab molecule in the C57BL/6 strain, which is highly susceptible to EAMG, yields the EAMG resistant mutant B6.C-H-2bm12 (bm12). We investigated here the consequences of the bm 12 mutation on the CD4+ response to the TAChR alpha subunit. Upon immunization with TAChR, CD4+ cells became sensitized to TAChR and anti-AChR antibodies were produced in both bm12 and C57BL/6 strains. Overlapping synthetic peptides, corresponding to the complete sequence of TAChR alpha subunit, were used to identify Th epitopes. CD4+ cells from C57BL/6 mice recognized peptides T alpha 150-169, T alpha 181-200, and T alpha 360-378. CD4+ cells from bm12 mice did not respond to any synthetic sequence. Upon injection of the three C57BL/6 Th epitope peptides, either individually or as a pool, CD4+ cells from C57BL/6 mice recognized each peptide and TAChR. Therefore they recognized epitopes similar or identical to those originated from TAChR processing. CD4+ cells from bm12 mice injected with the same peptides responded to T alpha 360-378 strongly, to a lesser extent to T alpha 181-200, never to peptide T alpha 150-169. Only CD4+ cells sensitized against the T epitope peptide T alpha 181-200 responded to TAChR. We tested if lack of response to T alpha 150-169, and the low response to T alpha 181-200, was due to inability of the I-Abm12 molecule to present the T epitope peptides. bm12 and C57BL/6 APC were used to present the T epitope peptides to specifically sensitized CD4+ cells from C57BL/6 mice. All T epitope peptides were presented by bm12 APC, although T alpha 150-169 was presented less efficiently than by C57BL/6 APC. Resistance to EAMG induced by the bm12 mutation may be due to the change in the epitope repertoire of AChR-specific Th cells, and lack of recognition of otherwise immunodominant Th epitopes. For at least one epitope this might be due to absence of potentially reactive, specific CD4+ clones.  相似文献   

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