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1.
Genetically related susceptibility for experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis was investigated in nine inbred strains of rats immunized with heterologous acetylcholine (AChR) from Torpedo californica. Wistar Munich and Fischer strain animals consistently developed severe, fatal disease associated with impaired neuromuscular transmission and increased sensitivity to low doses of curare. A lower incidence of disease was induced in Wistar Kyoto, ACI, Brown Norway, Buffalo, and Lewis strain animals. In contrast, Wistar Furth and Copenhagen strain animals were resistant to experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis, electrophysiologic responses were normal, and animals were insensitive to curare. All strains of animals manifested equivalent amounts of serum antibody to AChR and total muscle AChR was reduced to the same extent in both resistant and susceptible animals. In contrast, the amount of antibody-bound AChR was greater in susceptible Wistar Munich animals than the amount observed in resistant Wistar Furth animals. These data suggest that impaired neurotransmission is correlated with the extent of antibody binding to the AChR. The discordance in the amount of antibody bound to the AChR of resistant and susceptible animals may result from heritable differences in antibody properties. Cross-breeding experiments with Wistar Munich and Wistar Furth animals show that resistance for development of experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis is recessive and indicate that disease susceptibility is linked to one or two genetic loci.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract

The nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChR) are presently the best-characterized neurotransmitter receptors. They are pentamers of homologous or identical subunits, symmetrically arranged to form a transmembrane cation channel. The AChR subunits form a family of homologous proteins, derived from a common ancestor. An autoimmune response to muscle AChR causes the disease myasthenia gravis. This review summarizes recent developments in the understanding of the AChR structure and its molecular recognition by the immune system in myasthenia.  相似文献   

3.
Experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis (EAMG) is an autoimmune disease in which antibodies to acetylcholine receptor (AChR) cause loss of AChR from muscle, thereby impairing neuromuscular transmission. Here we report the use of a hybrid molecule that contains ricin toxin, irreversibly coupled to AChR to specifically suppress the immune response to AChR in vitro. Lymph node cell cultures from rats with EAMG pretreated with ricin toxin-AChR conjugates exhibited suppressed T helper cell proliferation and B cell antibody synthesis in response to the subsequent addition of AChR. Nonspecific toxicity of the conjugates was measured by suppression of the T cell proliferative response to the mitogen concanavalin A and the antigen keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH), and B cell antibody production to KLH. We have evaluated different pretreatment conditions and ricin toxin covalently coupled to AChR in different molar ratios to optimize specific immunosuppression. By varying the number of ricin molecules covalently bound to AChR in the immunotoxin, we were able to minimize the nonspecific toxicity while still maintaining specific killing of AChR-reactive lymphocytes. Furthermore, B cells were more susceptible to specific killing than were the T cells. The specific immunosuppression was potentiated by performing the pretreatment with immunotoxin in the presence of chloroquine. Chloroquine raises lysosomal pH and probably delays the degradation of immunotoxin in the cell. It should be noted that ricin toxin was covalently coupled to AChR by using a novel, non-reducible reaction. These in vitro results suggest that it may be feasible to use immunotoxin molecules to specifically suppress this autoimmune response in vivo.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract

Myasthenia gravis (MG) is an autoimmune disease in which anti-acetylcholine receptor antibodies (anti-AChR) cause loss of functional endplate AChR by increasing AChR degradation, and by complement-mediated destruction. MG anti-AChR binds to regions on the human AChR which can be defined by monoclonal antibodies (mabs).

Several congenital forms of myasthenia have been described, three of which may directly involve abnormalites of the AChR, including one in which the open-time of the ion channel is prolonged.  相似文献   

5.
To analyze components of the idiotypic network in experimental autoimmune disease, we produced 17 isogeneic anti-idiotopic monoclonal antibodies (anti-Id) against two experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis-producing anti-acetylcholine receptor (anti-AChR) monoclonal antibodies. We studied the binding of five of the anti-Id to the anti-AChR monoclonal antibodies bearing the complementary idiotopes (Id-mAb). They bound with Kd values ranging from 0.06 to 0.86 nM, values comparable to those of Id-mAb:AChR complexes (0.26 and 0.34 nM). All of the anti-Id tested moderately inhibited the binding of AChR to Id-mAb, whereas for each anti-Id, AChR either strongly inhibited anti-Id binding or had no effect on anti-Id binding. Hence, the inhibition of Id-mAb:AChR binding by anti-Id was not reciprocal with the inhibition of anti-Id:Id-mAb binding by AChR. For each anti-Id, the relative affinities of anti-Id and AChR for Id-mAb together with the lack of symmetry of inhibition by anti-Id compared to inhibition by AChR indicate that these two "ligands" are not competitive inhibitors. Consequently, anti-Id and AChR do not bind to overlapping sites on the Id-mAb, suggesting that the observed inhibition is mediated allosterically. This may be a common mechanism of anti-Id:Id binding, which would have important implications for the mechanism of anti-Id-induced suppression.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Myasthenia gravis (MG) is a T cell-dependent, Ab-mediated autoimmune disease. Ab against muscle acetylcholine receptor (AChR) cause the muscular weakness that characterizes MG and its animal model, experimental MG (EMG). EMG is induced in C57BL6 (B6) mice by three injections of Torpedo AChR (TAChR) in adjuvant. B6 mice develop anti-TAChR Ab that cross-react with mouse muscle AChR, but their CD4+ T cells do not cross-react with mouse AChR sequences. Moreover, murine EMG is not self-maintaining as is human MG, and it has limited duration. Several studies suggest that IL-4 has a protecting function in EMG. Here we show that B6 mice genetically deficient in IL-4 (IL-4-/-) develop long-lasting muscle weakness after a single immunization with TAChR. They develop chronic self-reactive Ab, and their CD4+ T cells respond not only to the TAChR and TAChR subunit peptides, but also to several mouse AChR subunit peptides. These results suggest that in B6 mice, regulatory mechanisms that involve IL-4 contribute to preventing the development of a chronic Ab-mediated autoimmune response to the AChR.  相似文献   

8.
Myasthenia gravis (MG) and its animal model, experimental autoimmune (EA) MG, are caused by T cell-dependent autoantibodies that react with the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) on muscle and interfere with neuromuscular transmission. Thus, selective inactivation of CD4(+) AChR-specific T helper cells should lower AChR Ab levels and ameliorate disease. In the Lewis rat model of EAMG, alpha chain residues 100-116 of the AChR represent the dominant T cell epitope, which is important in helping Ab responses to this autoantigen. In the present report, we have applied a new design technique that requires no knowledge of Ag receptor sequences on errant T cells in order to develop a synthetic peptide vaccine against T cells reactive with the aforementioned T cell epitope. Immunization with the peptide 1) induced polyclonal and monoclonal Ab, which inhibited AChR 100-116 stimulation of AChR-sensitized lymphocytes and recognized Vbeta15 containing T cell receptors on AChR 100-116-specific T cell lines and clones; 2) lowered AChR Ab levels; 3) reduced the loss of muscle AChR; and 4) lessened the incidence and severity of EAMG. These findings suggest a new strategy for the functional abrogation of epitope-specific T cells that could have potential application to human autoimmune diseases.  相似文献   

9.
The neonatal FcR (FcRn) plays a critical role in IgG homeostasis by protecting it from a lysosomal degradation pathway. It has been shown that IgG has an abnormally short half-life in FcRn-deficient mice and that FcRn blockade significantly increases the catabolism of serum IgG in mice. Therefore, reduction of serum IgG half-life may have therapeutic benefits in Ab-mediated autoimmune diseases. We have studied the therapeutic effects of an anti-rat FcRn mAb, 1G3, in two rat models of myasthenia gravis, a prototypical Ab-mediated autoimmune disease. Passive experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis was induced by administration of an anti-acetylcholine receptor (AChR) mAb, and it was shown that treatment with 1G3 resulted in dose-dependent amelioration of the disease symptoms. In addition, the concentration of pathogenic Ab in the serum was reduced significantly. The effect of 1G3 was also studied in an active model of experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis in which rats were immunized with AChR. Treatment with 1G3 significantly reduced the severity of the disease symptoms as well as the levels of total IgG and anti-AChR IgG relative to untreated animals. These data suggest that FcRn blockade may be an effective way to treat Ab-mediated autoimmune diseases.  相似文献   

10.
Gene(s) at the I-A subregion of the murine major histocompatibility complex influence susceptibility to experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis. C57Bl/6 mice immunized with acetylcholine receptors (AChR) in complete Freund's adjuvant demonstrated cellular and humoral immune responses to AChR. They developed muscle weakness characteristic of myasthenia gravis and demonstrated a reduction in the muscle AChR content. The kinetics of AChR-specific lymphocyte proliferation generally correlate with anti-AChR antibody response. AChR-specific lymphocyte proliferation was also observed in C57Bl/6 splenocytes after secondary immunization with AChR. The in vitro cellular reactivity to AChR in experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis (EAMG) mice (C57Bl/6) was suppressed by monoclonal anti-I-Ab antibodies directed against private (Ia20) or public (Ia8) specificities, suggesting a critical role for these Ia determinants in the cellular immune response to AChR in murine EAMG.  相似文献   

11.
Myasthenia gravis (MG) is a disease thought to result from an autoimmune response against the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor of the neuromuscular junction. Although there is little doubt that the muscular weakness characteristic of MG can be attributed to an antibody-mediated reduction in the density of AChR, the mechanism responsible for this reduction remains uncertain. In the present studies we have used a mouse model of MG, termed experimental myasthenia gravis (EMG), to test the possibility that antigenic modulation of AChR may be the principle mechanism whereby this reduction in AChR density is achieved. We found that immunization of mice with AChR, on average, leads to a twofold increase in the rate of junctional AChR degradation. Because this effect occurred to the same extent in mice that developed severe paralysis and in those that gave no indication of muscular weakness, the role of antigenic modulation as a major pathologic mechanism in MG is questioned.  相似文献   

12.
C5 gene influences the development of murine myasthenia gravis   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The influence of the C5 gene and C5 deficiency on murine experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis (EAMG) susceptibility was evaluated. Two co-isogenic strains, B10.D2/nSn (C5 sufficient) and B10.D2/oSn (C5 deficient), which are genetically identical except for the C5 gene locus, were immunized with acetylcholine receptors (AChR) in CFA to induce myasthenia gravis. Both strains had equivalent concentration of serum autoantibodies to muscle AChR and antibodies bound to muscle AChR. C5-sufficient B10.D2/nSn, but not C5-deficient B10.D2/oSn, demonstrated increased incidence of clinical disease and death and lost significant amounts of muscle AChR. Therefore, C5 deficiency in B10.D2/oSn prevented EAMG. C5 gene, which codes for C component C5, may influence EAMG pathogenesis through activation of the terminal lytic C sequence (C5 to C9) required for muscle AChR destruction, which is the primary pathology.  相似文献   

13.
Because presentation of acetylcholine receptor (AChR) peptides to T cells is critical to the development of myasthenia gravis, we examined the role of cathepsin S (Cat S) in experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis (EAMG) induced by AChR immunization. Compared with wild type, Cat S null mice were markedly resistant to the development of EAMG, and showed reduced T and B cell responses to AChR. Cat S null mice immunized with immunodominant AChR peptides showed weak responses, indicating failed peptide presentation accounted for autoimmune resistance. A Cat S inhibitor suppressed in vitro IFN-gamma production by lymph node cells from AChR-immunized, DR3-bearing transgenic mice. Because Cat S null mice are not severely immunocompromised, Cat S inhibitors could be tested for their therapeutic potential in EAMG.  相似文献   

14.
The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) is a large membrane protein found in muscle cells. It is involved in the transformation of acetylcholine packets into a membrane depolarization, which thereby leads to a muscle twitch. This large, complex molecule is the target of the autoimmune attack in myasthenia gravis, and much has been learned in the past decade about myasthenia by the induction of autoimmunity to AChR in experimental animals. Experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis (EAMG) has been produced in a variety of animals by immunization with AChR or AChR-like material, or by the passive transfer of anti-AChR antibodies or lymphocytes from afflicted animals into normal animals. EAMG is a remarkably faithful model of human myasthenia and has provided much information about how the immune response to AChR progresses and how weakness and damage to the neuromuscular junction ensure. EAMG has also allowed the development of a number of revolutionary forms of treatment in which only the abnormal response to AChR is restrained, and other necessary immune functions are left intact. These advances in treatment are not far from being tested in human myasthenia gravis. The experience gained in applying these concepts in EAMG and human myasthenia will be helpful in developing similar forms of treatment for other autoimmune diseases.  相似文献   

15.
CTLA-4 appears to be a negative regulator of T cell activation and is implicated in T cell-mediated autoimmune diseases. Experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis (EAMG), induced by immunization of C57BL/6 mice with acetylcholine receptor (AChR) in adjuvant, is an autoantibody-mediated disease model for human myasthenia gravis (MG). The production of anti-AChR Abs in MG and EAMG is T cell dependent. In the present study, we demonstrate that anti-CTLA-4 Ab treatment enhances T cell responses to AChR, increases anti-AChR Ab production, and provokes a rapid onset and severe EAMG. To address possible mechanisms underlying the enhanced autoreactive T cell responses after anti-CTLA-4 Ab treatment, mice were immunized with the immunodominant peptide alpha(146-162) representing an extracellular sequence of the ACHR: Anti-CTLA-4 Ab, but not control Ab, treatment subsequent to peptide immunization results in clinical EAMG with diversification of the autoantibody repertoire as well as enhanced T cell proliferation against not only the immunizing alpha(146-162) peptide, but also against other subdominant epitopes. Thus, treatment with anti-CTLA-4 Ab appears to induce determinant spreading, diversify the autoantibody repertoire, and enhance B cell-mediated autoimmune disease in this murine model of MG.  相似文献   

16.
A single immunization of Lewis rats with purified acetylcholine receptor (AChR) emulsified in adjuvant typically stimulates the production of oligoclonal AChR-reactive antibodies (as demonstrated by IEF) dominated by the IgG2a subclass, of moderate but clonotypically heterogeneous relative Ag-binding avidity, and capable of inducing symptoms of experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis. Although similar immunization of Wistar Furth rats produces AChR-reactive antibodies with similar characteristics of clonotypic heterogeneity, avidity, and isotype expression, no detectable signs of AChR-dependent muscle impairment is observed. This contrasts the ability to induce impaired AChR function upon the passive transfer of pre-formed Lewis anti-AChR antibodies into naive Wistar Furth rats, suggesting that disease resistance in this model is not conferred at the level of the AChR itself. Moreover, if more aggressive immunization protocols are used (i.e., multiple injections of AChR), a transient breakthrough of AChR-dependent muscle dysfunction can be induced directly in the Wistar Furth strain indicating that the potential for the production of disease-causing antibodies does exist in the Wistar Furth repertoire. IEF analysis of Wistar Furth anti-AChR antibodies has revealed that hyperimmunization results in modified antibody clonotype expression that might explain changing expression of disease symptoms; however, explanations for the apparent "resistance" of Wistar Furth rats to disease induction are likely to be complex.  相似文献   

17.
In vitro antibody responses by rat lymph node cells against purified acetylcholine receptor (AChR) were shown to be inhibitable by protein conjugates prepared with anti-idiotypic antibody and the toxic A chain of ricin. The idiotype specificity of the cytotoxicity was demonstrated by the inability of the same immunotoxin to inhibit an unrelated antibody response (anti-KLH) and by abrogation of specific toxicity in the presence of unconjugated anti-idiotype or antigen (AChR). Furthermore, immunotoxin prepared with an irrelevant antibody specificity failed to significantly inhibit either the anti-AChR or control antibody responses. Therefore, we suggest that idiotype-specific immunotoxins may be a useful addition or alternative to presently employed immunotherapies for autoimmune disease.  相似文献   

18.
Immunotherapy for myasthenia gravis: a murine model   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
In vivo therapy with monoclonal antibody (mAb) GK1.5, which recognizes a glycoprotein antigen designated L3T4 on murine helper T lymphocytes, either prevented or suppressed the development of murine lupus, autoimmune encephalomyelitis, and collagen arthritis. The L3T4 antigen in the mouse is analogous to the human Leu-3/T4 antigen expressed on helper T lymphocytes, because they both participate in the T cell response to class II major histocompatibility complex (MHC) antigens. Class II MHC genes and I-A antigens mediate murine experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis (EAMG) induced by acetylcholine receptor (AChR) autoimmunity. We studied the efficacy of mAb GK1.5 as an immunotherapeutic agent for murine EAMG. Therapy with mAb GK1.5 not only suppressed established autoimmunity to AChR but also prevented loss of muscle AChR in mice with EAMG. Moreover, permanent remission of clinical muscle weakness was induced if mAb GK1.5 therapy was initiated after the onset of clinical disease. Because the function of the Leu-3/T4 determinant on human helper T lymphocytes is analogous to the murine L3T4 determinant, use of antibody to the Leu-3/T4 determinant as an immunotherapeutic agent may provide a way to control the progression of human MG.  相似文献   

19.
In myasthenia gravis (MG), TNF and IL-1beta polymorphisms and high serum levels of these proinflammatory cytokines have been observed. Likewise, TNF and IL-1beta are critical for the activation of acetylcholine receptor (AChR)-specific T and B cells and for the development of experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis (EAMG) induced by AChR immunization. We tested the therapeutic effect of human recombinant IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra) in C57BL/6 mice with EAMG. Multiple daily injections of 0.01 mg of IL-1ra administered for 2 wk following two AChR immunizations decreased the incidence and severity of clinical EAMG. Furthermore, IL-1ra treatment of mice with ongoing clinical EAMG reduced the clinical symptoms of disease. The IL-1ra-mediated suppression of clinical disease was associated with suppressed serum IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha, IL-1beta, IL-2, IL-6, C3, and anti-AChR IgG1 without influencing total serum IgG. Therefore, IL-1ra could be used as a nonsteroidal drug for the treatment of MG.  相似文献   

20.
We prepared highly purified acetylcholine receptor (AChR)-specific T lymphocytes from rats with experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis (EAMG). Inbred rats were primed with AChR frm 3 different sources: from the electric organs of Electrophorus electricus and Torpedo californica and from denervated rat muscle. After 20 to 30 days, lymphocytes from regional lymph nodes (primary cells) were challenged with soluble AChR in vitro. The activated blast cells were isolated by density gradient centrifugation and allowed to revert back to small secondary lymphocytes in the absence of antigen. These secondary anti-AChR cells were highly responsive to the type of AChR with which they had been primed. Their reactivity critically depended on help by syngeneic accessory cells. Anti-Electrophorus AChR primary and secondary cells cross-reacted detectably with rat AChR and vice versa, whereas anti-Torpedo AChR primary and secondary cells did not significantly cross-react with Electrophorus or rat AChR. Secondary T cells strongly reactive against rat AChR could be selected in vitro from Electrophorus AChR-primed populations by using rat AChR as selecting stimulant. These cells responded equally well against Electrophorus and rat AChR and thus include autoreactive T cell clones.  相似文献   

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