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1.
We recently described a novel H2E class II-transgenic model (A(-)E(+)) of experimental autoimmune thyroiditis (EAT) that permits disease induction with heterologous thyroglobulin (Tg), but unlike conventional susceptible strains, precludes self-reactivity to autologous mouse Tg. In transgenic E(+)B10 (A(+)E(+)) mice, the presence of endogenous H2A genes is protective against H2E-mediated thyroiditis, inhibiting EAT development. The suppressive effect of H2A genes on H2E-mediated thyroiditis mirrors previous reports of H2E suppression on H2A-mediated autoimmune diseases, including EAT. The mechanism of the reciprocal-suppressive effect between class II genes is unclear, although the involvement of regulatory T cells has been proposed. We have recently reported that CD4(+)CD25(+) regulatory T cells mediate peripheral tolerance induced with mouse Tg in CBA mice. To determine whether these cells play a role in our E(+)-transgenic model, we first confirmed the existence of CD4(+)CD25(+) T cells regulating thyroiditis in E(+)B10.Ab(0) (A(-)E(+)) and B10 (A(+)E(-)) mice by i.v. administration of CD25 mAb before EAT induction. The depletion of CD4(+)CD25(+) T cells enhanced thyroiditis induction in the context of either H2E or H2A. Moreover, reconstitution of CD4(+)CD25(+) T cells from naive B10 mice restored resistance to EAT. E(+)B10 (A(+)E(+)) mice were also depleted of CD4(+)CD25(+) T cells before the challenge to determine their role in thyroiditis in the presence of both H2A and H2E genes. Depletion of CD4(+)CD25(+) regulatory T cells offset the suppression of H2E-mediated thyroiditis by H2A. Thus, these regulatory T cells may be involved in the reciprocal-suppressive effect between class II genes.  相似文献   

2.
The AE+ transgenic mouse is highly susceptible to human thyroglobulin (hTg)-induced thyroiditis, but strongly tolerant to a challenge by mouse thyroglobulin (mTg), in stark contrast to traditionally susceptible strains, wherein mTg induces stronger thyroiditis. To identify mouse thyroid epitopes recognized by destructive, hTg-primed T cells, we selected the three hTg epitopes known to be presented by H2Eb, as the basis for synthesizing potential mTg epitopes. One 15-mer peptide, mTg409, did prime T cells, elicit Ab, and induce thyroiditis. Moreover, cells primed with corresponding, pathogenic hTg410 cross-reacted with mTg409, and vice versa. mTg409 contained 4/4 anchor residues, similar to the corresponding hTg peptide. Based on this finding, a second mTg epitope, mTg179, was subsequently identified. These mTg autoepitopes, identified by using thyroiditogenic hTg epitopes, help to explain the severe thyroiditis seen in this novel AE+ transgenic model.  相似文献   

3.
 Susceptibility to experimental autoimmune thyroiditis (EAT) is linked to H2-A class II genes;k and s haplotypes are susceptible, while b and f are resistant. EAT is inducible with thyroglobulins (Tgs) from several mammalian species which share portions of identical sequences. But cross-activation and cross-tolerance studies with mouse (m), human (h), and porcine (p) Tg have indicated mTg-unique T-cell epitope(s), in addition to conserved, in EAT induction. The recent introduction of the HLA-DRB1*0301 (DR3) transgene rendered major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II-negative (Ab0) mice susceptible to EAT induction by both hTg and mTg, suggesting usage of conserved epitopes. Here, we introduced the H2-Ea k transgene into resistant B10 (H2 b ) or Ab0 mice with a defective Ea gene to provide functional surface H2E (b haplotype) expression. Surprisingly, both transgenic strains showed severe inflammation only after hTg, but not mTg, immunization, although the moderating influence of the A b gene in B10 was evident. In proliferative assays, hTg-primed cells did not respond to mTg, nor to conserved 12mer peptides from three primary hormonogenic sites, two of which can activate T cells for thyroiditis transfer and cytotoxicity. The vigorous response to hTg stimulation was reduced only by Eβb-specific monoclonal antibody. EAT induction with bovine and pTg showed responses similar to hTg, suggesting thyroiditogenic epitopes shared with hTg, but not mTg. This is the first demonstration of: (1) nonpermissiveness for EAT induction with mTg, normally the most thyroiditogenic Tg and the one with unique epitopes for susceptible mice, and (2) the separation of hTg from mTg in EAT induction in H2-E-transgenic mice. Received: 15 January 1999 / Revised: 23 April 1999  相似文献   

4.
Susceptibility and resistance to experimental autoimmune thyroiditis is encoded by MHC H2A genes. We reported that traditionally resistant B10 (H2(b)) mice permit thyroiditis induction with mouse thyroglobulin (mTg) after depleting regulatory T cells (Tregs), supporting A(b) presentation to thyroiditogenic T cells. Yet, Ea(k) transgenic mice, expressing A(b) and normally absent E(b) molecules (E(+)B10 mice), are susceptible to thyroiditis induction without Treg depletion. To explore the effect of E(b) expression on mTg presentation by A(b), seven putative A(b)-binding, 15-16-mer peptides were synthesized. Five were immunogenic for both B10 and E(+)B10 mice. The effect of E(b) expression was tested by competition with an Ealpha52-68 peptide, because Ealpha52-68 occupies approximately 15% of A(b) molecules in E(+)B10 mice, binding with high affinity. Ealpha52-68 competitively reduced the proliferative response to mTg, mTg1677, and mTg2342 of lymph node cells primed to each Ag. Moreover, mTg1677 induced mild thyroiditis in Treg-depleted B10 mice, and in E(+)B10 mice without the need for Treg depletion. Ealpha52-68 competition with mTg-derived peptides may impede clonal deletion of pathogenic, mTg-specific T cells in the thymus.  相似文献   

5.
Experimental autoimmune thyroiditis (EAT), a model for Hashimoto's thyroiditis, is a T cell-mediated disease inducible with mouse thyroglobulin (mTg). Pretreatment with mTg, however, can induce CD4+ T cell-mediated tolerance to EAT. We demonstrate that CD4+CD25+ regulatory cells are critical for the tolerance induction, as in vivo depletion of CD25+ cells abrogated established tolerance, and CD4+CD25+ cells from tolerized mice suppressed mTg-responsive cells in vitro. Importantly, administration of an agonistic CD137 monoclonal antibody (mAb) inhibited tolerance development, and the mediation of established tolerance. CD137 mAb also inhibited the suppression of mTg-responsive cells by CD4+CD25+ cells in vitro. Signaling through CD137 likely resulted in enhancement of the responding inflammatory T cells, as anti-CD137 did not enable CD4+CD25+ T cells to proliferate in response to mTg in vitro.  相似文献   

6.
Thyroglobulin (Tg) represents one of the largest known self-antigens involved in autoimmunity. Numerous studies have implicated it in triggering and perpetuating the autoimmune response in autoimmune thyroid diseases (AITD). Indeed, traditional models of autoimmune thyroid disease, experimental autoimmune thyroiditis (EAT), are generated by immunizing mice with thyroglobulin protein in conjunction with an adjuvant, or by high repeated doses of Tg alone, without adjuvant. These extant models are limited in their experimental flexibility, i.e. the ability to make modifications to the Tg used in immunizations. In this study, we have immunized mice with a plasmid cDNA encoding the full-length human Tg (hTG) protein, in order to generate a model of Hashimoto's thyroiditis which is closer to the human disease and does not require adjuvants to breakdown tolerance. Human thyroglobulin cDNA was injected and subsequently electroporated into skeletal muscle using a square wave generator. Following hTg cDNA immunizations, the mice developed both B and T cell responses to Tg, albeit with no evidence of lymphocytic infiltration of the thyroid. This novel model will afford investigators the means to test various hypotheses which were unavailable with the previous EAT models, specifically the effects of hTg sequence variations on the induction of thyroiditis.  相似文献   

7.
Previous studies have shown that T cells from mice genetically susceptible to experimental autoimmune thyroiditis (EAT) recognize determinants shared between mouse thyroglobulin (Tg) and heterologous Tgs. Some shared determinants are thyroiditogenic; lymphocytes from mice immunized with mouse Tg (MTg) or human Tg (HTg) and reciprocally restimulated in vitro with either Tg can transfer EAT. Studies on the mechanisms of self-tolerance have shown that pretreatment with soluble MTg suppresses in vitro proliferation to MTg and EAT induction with MTg. To determine the role of share epitopes in maintaining tolerance, mice were pretreated with soluble HTg and immunized with HTg or MTg and adjuvant. Cells from HTg-pretreated. HTg-immunized mice showed suppressed in vitro proliferative response to HTg. Following MTg immunization, the cells showed suppressed in vitro response to MTg. However, in contrast to MTg pretreatment, the subsequent development of EAT in vivo was unaltered in severity following HTg pretreatment. Thus, determinants shared between HTg and MTg can induce suppression of in vitro responses to HTg and MTg, but not inhibit the onset of thyroiditis, suggesting that T cells recognizing MTg-unique epitopes expanded to mediate thyroiditis. We conclude that recognition of both unique epitopes expanded to mediate thyroiditis. We conclude that recognition of both unique and shared epitopes on MTg are essential for the overall maintenance of self-tolerance.  相似文献   

8.
Our earlier study showed that GM-CSF has the potential not only to prevent, but also to suppress, experimental autoimmune thyroiditis (EAT). GM-CSF-induced EAT suppression in mice was accompanied by an increase in the frequency of CD4(+)CD25(+) regulatory T cells that could suppress mouse thyroglobulin (mTg)-specific T cell responses in vitro, but the underlying mechanism of this suppression was not elucidated. In this study we show that GM-CSF can induce dendritic cells (DCs) with a semimature phenotype, an important characteristic of DCs, which are known to play a critical role in the induction and maintenance of regulatory T cells. Adoptive transfer of CD4(+)CD25(+) T cells from GM-CSF-treated and mTg-primed donors into untreated, but mTg-primed, recipients resulted in decreased mTg-specific T cell responses. Furthermore, lymphocytes obtained from these donors and recipients after adoptive transfer produced significantly higher levels of IL-10 compared with mTg-primed, untreated, control mice. Administration of anti-IL-10R Ab into GM-CSF-treated mice abrogated GM-CSF-induced suppression of EAT, as indicated by increased mTg-specific T cell responses, thyroid lymphocyte infiltration, and follicular destruction. Interestingly, in vivo blockade of IL-10R did not affect GM-CSF-induced expansion of CD4(+)CD25(+) T cells. However, IL-10-induced immunosuppression was due to its direct effects on mTg-specific effector T cells. Taken together, these results indicated that IL-10, produced by CD4(+)CD25(+) T cells that were probably induced by semimature DCs, is essential for disease suppression in GM-CSF-treated mice.  相似文献   

9.
Experimental autoimmune thyroiditis (EAT), induced by thuroglobulin (Tg) and adjuvant, is major histocompatibility complex-controlled and dependent on Tg-reactive T cells, but the immunopathogenic T-cell epitopes on Tg remain mostly undefined. We report here the thyroiditogenicity of a novel rat Tg peptide (TgP2; corresponding to human Tg amino acids 2695–2713), identified by algorithms as a site of putative T-cell epitope(s). TgP2 causes EAT in SJL (H-2 s) but not in C3H or B10.BR (H-2 k), BALB/c (H-2 d), and B10 (H-2 b) mice. This reveals a new genetic pattern of EAT susceptibility, since H-2 k mice are known to be high reponders (susceptible) after Tg challenge. Following in vivo priming with TgP2, T cells from only SJL mice proliferated significantly and consistently to TgP2 in vitro, whereas TgP2-specific IgG was observed in all strains tested. Adoptive transfer of TgP2-primed SJL lymph node cells to naive syngeneic recipients induced a pronounced mononuclear infiltration of the thyroid, which was more extensive than that observed after direct peptide challenge. TgP2 is non-immunodominant, since priming of SJL mice with rTg did not consistently elicit T-cell responses to TgP2 in vitro and a TgP2-specific T-cell hybridoma did not respond to antigen presenting cells pulsed with rTg. The data support the notion that Tg epitopes need not be either iodinated or immunodominant in order to cause severe thyroiditis and that the genetic pattern of the disease they induce can be distinct from that of Tg-mediated EAT. Correspondence to: G. Carayanniotis.  相似文献   

10.
Murine experimental autoimmune thyroiditis has been used as a model for human autoimmune thyroiditis. Experimental autoimmune thyroiditis is induced in mice by immunization with mouse thyroglobulin (Tg) in CFA. To characterize the antibodies to this autoantigen, we have studied the binding specificities and determined the nucleotide sequences of monoclonal anti-Tg antibodies. The specificities of the mAb for determinants on Tg varied extensively. Seven of 16 mAb showed reactivity to only mTg, 4 reacted to Tg from more than one species and four reacted to a variety of Ag. Many of the mAb were competitively inhibited by thyroid hormones, suggesting that they recognize the hormonogenic sites on the Tg molecule. The mAb could be divided into at least seven reactivity patterns based on reciprocal competitive inhibition studies, indicating that mTg contains at least seven antigenic regions. DNA sequence analysis of the mAb showed that a large number of V region gene segments encoded the H and L chains. No evidence for preferential use of any V region family or gene segment was found. Gene segments from the VH 7183, Q52, J558, and VH10 families were used by heavy chains, and the V kappa 1, 4, 8, 9, 19, and 21 families were used by kappa-chains. The results indicate that the antigenic epitopes on mTg elicit a very diverse autoantibody response that is derived from a large number of V region gene segments. Many of these autoantibodies show specific reactivity with mTg indicating they recognize species specific epitopes. The results suggest that clonal deletion of autoreactive Ab to certain self-epitopes may not occur.  相似文献   

11.
Susceptibility to experimental autoimmune thyroiditis (EAT) in the mouse is linked to the I-A subregion of the major histocompatibility complex. EAT can be induced in susceptible strains of mice by immunization with mouse thyroglobulin (MTg) and adjuvant. We have described a cell transfer system wherein spleen cells from EAT-susceptible CBA/J mice primed in vivo with MTg and lipopolysaccharide (LPS) can be activated in vitro with MTg to transfer EAT to naive syngeneic recipients. This cell transfer system was used to elucidate the cellular basis for the I-A restriction in EAT. While the cell active in transferring EAT was Thy 1+ I-A-, depletion of I-A+ cells from the in vitro culture prevented the activation of EAT effector T cells. MTg-pulsed mitomycin C-treated naive syngeneic spleen cells as antigen-presenting cells (APCs) could replace the I-A+ cells in vitro. Allogeneic (Balb/c) APCs were ineffective. Using APCs from several recombinant inbred strains of mice, it was shown that C3H/HEN and B10.A(4R) APCs were effective in activating MTg/LPS-primed CBA/J spleen cells to transfer EAT while B10.A(5R) APCs were ineffective. This maps the H-2 restriction to the K or I-A subregions. Addition of polyclonal anti-Iak or monoclonal anti-I-Ak or anti-L3T4 during in vitro activation inhibited both the generation of EAT effector cells and the proliferative response to MTg. Irrelevant anti-Ia reagents, monoclonal anti-I-Ek, and monoclonal anti-I-Jk were ineffective. Thus the I-A restriction in murine EAT appears to result from an I-A restricted interaction between Ia+ APCs and Ia- EAT effector T cells.  相似文献   

12.
The central goal in the therapy of autoimmune diseases is to develop potent tools able to exert specific control of the immune response to self Ag. Anti-Id may provide such specific immunodulators because the relevance of the idiotypic network in autoimmunity is well documented. We now describe the protective immunity against experimental autoimmune thyroiditis induced exclusively by a thyroglobulin (Tg)-specific cytotoxic T cell clone and show that this down-regulation occurs through the generation of anti-Id antibodies (Ab) (Ab2Beta) which recognize the paratope of a anti-Tg mAb (Ab1) specific to the pathogenic epitope of the Tg molecule. We further analyze the various steps of the Ab responses (Ab1, Ab2, and Ab3) in terms of poly-, mono-, and autospecificities for the pathogenic epitope of the Tg molecule and for the idiotope of the related Ab.  相似文献   

13.
We have examined whether the peptide (368-381) from the murine adenovirus type 1 E1B sequence, exhibiting a high degree of homology with the known pathogenic thyroglobulin (Tg) T cell epitope (2695-2706), can induce experimental autoimmune thyroiditis (EAT) in SJL/J mice. The viral peptide was a poor immunogen at the T or B cell level and did not elicit EAT either directly or by adoptive transfer assays. Surprisingly, however, the viral peptide was highly antigenic in vitro, activating a Tg2695-2706-specific T cell clone and reacting with serum IgG from mice primed with the Tg homologue. The viral peptide also induced strong recall responses in Tg2695-2706-primed lymph node cells, and subsequent adoptive transfer of these cells into naive mice led to development of highly significant EAT. These data demonstrate that nonimmunogenic viral peptides can act as agonists for preactivated autoreactive T cells and suggest that epitope mimicry may at times play a potentiating rather than a precipitating role in the pathogenesis of autoimmune disease.  相似文献   

14.
To delineate the contribution of L3T4+ and Lyt-2+ cells in the pathogenesis of experimental autoimmune thyroiditis (EAT), synergistic pairs of monoclonal antibodies (mAb) to the T cell subsets were used in conjunction with the adoptive transfer of mouse thyroglobulin (MTg)-activated cells from immunized mice. Initial experiments verified the important role of L3T4+ cells in the transfer of EAT. Subsequent experiments pointed to the relative contribution of both L3T4+ and Lyt-2+ cells, depending on the stage and extent of disease development. Treatment during disease with L3T4, but not Lyt-2, mAb alone significantly reduced thyroiditis. However, in situ analysis of the cellular infiltrate in thyroid sections revealed that, after treatment with mAb, the appropriate subset was eliminated without altering the amount of the other subset in the remaining lesion. In addition, treatment during severe thyroiditis following the transfer of MTg-activated lymph node cells showed that Lyt-2 mAb alone also reduced thyroid infiltration. When the recipients were pretreated with either pair of mAb before transfer, disease development was only moderately affected. We conclude that (i) donor L3T4+ cells are the primary cells responsible for the initial transfer and development of thyroiditis; and (ii) previous in vitro cytotoxicity data, plus current monoclonal antibody treatment of disease and in situ analysis, further implicate a role for Lyt-2+ cells in EAT pathogenesis.  相似文献   

15.
Experimental autoimmune thyroiditis (EAT) is a T cell-mediated disease that can be induced in mice after challenge with thyroglobulin (Tg) or Tg peptides. To date, five pathogenic Tg peptides have been identified, four of which are clustered toward the C-terminal end. Because susceptibility to EAT is under control of H-2A(k) genes, we have used an algorithm-based approach to identify A(k)-binding peptides with pathogenic potential within mouse Tg. Eight candidate synthetic peptides, varying in size from 9 to 15 aa, were tested and five of those (p306, p1579, p1826, p2102, and p2596) were found to induce EAT in CBA/J (H-2(k)) mice either after direct challenge with peptide in adjuvant or by adoptive transfer of peptide-sensitized lymph node cells (LNCs) into naive hosts. These pathogenic peptides were immunogenic at the T cell level, eliciting specific LNC proliferative responses and IL-2 and/or IFN-gamma secretion in recall assays in vitro, but contained nondominant epitopes. All immunogenic peptides were confirmed as A(k) binders because peptide-specific LNC proliferation was blocked by an A(k)-specific mAb, but not by a control mAb. Peptide-specific serum IgG was induced only by p2102 and p2596, but these Abs did not bind to intact mouse Tg. This study reaffirms the predictive value of A(k)-binding motifs in epitope mapping and doubles the number of known pathogenic T cell determinants in Tg that are now found scattered throughout the length of this large autoantigen. This knowledge may contribute toward our understanding of the pathogenesis of autoimmune thyroiditis.  相似文献   

16.
We previously demonstrated that: a) a cytotoxic T cell hybridoma (HTC2) was able to induce lysis of syngeneic macrophages pulsed with either porcine thyroglobulin (pTg) or the tryptic fragments (TF) from pTg less than 10 kDa (M(r)) and that b) these low M(r) pTg TF included pathogenic epitopes because their injection into CBA/J mice induces thyroid lymphocytic infiltration typical of experimental autoimmune thyroiditis. Therefore the biochemical analysis of the TF preparation from pTg less than 10 kDa M(r) was undertaken and the characterized peptides were tested for their ability to be recognized or not by HTC2 cells. The sequencing of the selected peptides showed a 70% sequence homology with a portion of human thyroglobulin (hTg). The lack of a published sequence of pTg led us to synthesize a 40-amino acid peptide (F40D) similar to that portion of hTg. This F40D peptide was able to generate lymphocytic infiltrations in CBA/J mice thyroid glands, as was the native pTg molecule. Although the lymphocytic infiltrations were similar in the pTg or F40D-immunized mice, auto-antibodies to pTg or to hTg were only detectable in mice immunized with pTg. In contrast, autoantibodies levels to F40D peptide were significantly increased in serum from mice in which EAT had been induced by the F40D peptide. This highly hydrophobic peptide shows a M(r) of 4,492 kDa; it is located at the end of the second-third of the thyroglobulin molecule and up to now represents a unique sequence from the hTg molecule inducing experimental autoimmune thyroiditis.  相似文献   

17.
Fms-like tyrosine kinase receptor 3-ligand (Flt3-L) and GM-CSF cause expansion of different subsets of dendritic cells and skew the immune response toward predominantly Th1 and Th2 type, respectively. In the present study, we investigated their effects on experimental autoimmune thyroiditis in CBA/J mice. Relative to mouse thyroglobulin (mTg) immunized controls, mTg-immunized mice treated with Flt3-L showed more severe thyroiditis characterized by enhanced lymphocytic infiltration of the thyroid, and IFN-gamma and IL-2 production. In contrast, mice treated with GM-CSF, either before or after immunization with mTg, showed suppressed T cell response to mTg and failed to develop thyroiditis. Lymphocytes from these mice, upon activation with mTg in vitro, produced higher levels of IL-4 and IL-10. Additionally, GM-CSF-treated mice showed an increase in the frequency of CD4(+)/CD25(+) T cells, which suppressed the mTg-specific T cell response. Neutralization of IL-10, but not IL-4, or depletion of CD4(+)/CD25(+) cells resulted in increased mTg-specific in vitro T cell proliferation suggesting that IL-10 produced by the Ag-specific CD4(+)/CD25(+) regulatory T cells might be critical for disease suppression. These results indicate that skewing immune response toward Th2, through selective activation of dendritic cells using GM-CSF, may have therapeutic potential in Th1 dominant autoimmune diseases including Hashimoto's thyroiditis.  相似文献   

18.
Ex vivo treatment of bone marrow-derived dendritic cells (DCs) with TNF-alpha has been previously shown to induce partial maturation of DCs that are able to suppress autoimmunity. In this study, we demonstrate that i.v. administration of TNF-alpha-treated, semimature DCs pulsed with thyrogloblin (Tg), but not with OVA Ag, inhibits the subsequent development of Tg-induced experimental autoimmune thyroiditis (EAT) in CBA/J mice. This protocol activates CD4(+)CD25(+) T cells in vivo, which secrete IL-10 upon specific recognition of Tg in vitro and express regulatory T cell (Treg)-associated markers such as glucocorticoid-induced TNFR, CTLA-4, and Foxp3. These CD4(+)CD25(+) Treg cells suppressed the proliferation and cytokine release of Tg-specific, CD4(+)CD25(-) effector cells in vitro, in an IL-10-independent, cell contact-dependent manner. Prior adoptive transfer of the same CD4(+)CD25(+) Treg cells into CBA/J hosts suppressed Tg-induced EAT. These results demonstrate that the tolerogenic potential of Tg-pulsed, semimature DCs in EAT is likely to be mediated through the selective activation of Tg-specific CD4(+)CD25(+) Treg cells and provide new insights for the study of Ag-specific immunoregulation of autoimmune diseases.  相似文献   

19.
Increased iodine intake has been associated with the development of experimental autoimmune thyroiditis (EAT), but the biological basis for this association remains poorly understood. One hypothesis has been that enhanced incorporation of iodine in thyroglobulin (Tg) promotes the generation of pathogenic T cell determinants. In this study we sought to test this by using the pathogenic nondominant A(s)-binding Tg peptides p2495 and p2694 as model Ags. SJL mice challenged with highly iodinated Tg (I-Tg) developed EAT of higher severity than Tg-primed controls, and lymph node cells (LNC) from I-Tg-primed hosts showed a higher proliferation in response to I-Tg in vitro than Tg-primed LNC reacting to Tg. Interestingly, I-Tg-primed LNC proliferated strongly in vitro against p2495, but not p2694, indicating efficient and selective priming with p2495 following processing of I-Tg in vivo. Tg-primed LNC did not respond to either peptide. Similarly, the p2495-specific, IL-2-secreting T cell hybridoma clone 5E8 was activated when I-Tg-pulsed, but not Tg-pulsed, splenocytes were used as APC, whereas the p2694-specific T cell hybridoma clone 6E10 remained unresponsive to splenic APC pulsed with Tg or I-Tg. The selective in vitro generation of p2495 was observed in macrophages or dendritic cells, but not in B cells, suggesting differential processing of I-Tg among various APC. These data demonstrate that enhanced iodination of Tg facilitates the selective processing and presentation of a cryptic pathogenic peptide in vivo or in vitro and suggest a mechanism that can at least in part account for the association of high iodine intake and the development of EAT.  相似文献   

20.
In response to Ag stimulation, Ag-specific T cells proliferate and accumulate in the peripheral lymphoid tissues. To avoid excessive T cell accumulation, the immune system has developed mechanisms to delete clonally expanded T cells. Fas/FasL-mediated apoptosis plays a critical role in the deletion of activated peripheral T cells, which is clearly demonstrated by superantigen (staphylococcal enterotoxin B)-induced deletion of Vbeta8(+) T cells. Using transgenic mice expressing a stabilized beta-catenin (beta-cat(Tg)), we show here that beta-catenin was able to enhance apoptosis of activated T cells by up-regulating Fas. In response to staphylococcal enterotoxin B stimulation, beta-cat(Tg) mice exhibited accelerated deletion of CD4(+)Vbeta8(+) T cells compared with wild type mice. Surface Fas levels were significantly higher on activated T cells obtained from beta-cat(Tg) mice than that from wild type mice. Additionally, T cells from beta-cat(Tg) mice were more sensitive to apoptosis induced by crosslinking Fas, activation-induced cell death, and to apoptosis induced by cytokine withdrawal. Lastly, beta-catenin bound to and stimulated the Fas promoter. Therefore, our data demonstrated that the beta-catenin pathway was able to promote the apoptosis of activated T cells in part via up-regulation of Fas.  相似文献   

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