1. Regulation of the effector stages of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis via neuroantigen-specific tolerance induction. III. A role for anergy/deletion.
- Author
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Tan LJ, Vanderlugt CL, McRae BL, and Miller SD
- Subjects
- Adoptive Transfer, Animals, Autoantigens administration & dosage, Cattle, Disease Models, Animal, Female, Mice, Mice, Inbred Strains, Myelin Basic Protein administration & dosage, Rats, Spleen cytology, Spleen drug effects, Spleen immunology, T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory drug effects, Time Factors, Autoantigens immunology, Clonal Anergy immunology, Clonal Deletion immunology, Encephalomyelitis, Autoimmune, Experimental immunology, Myelin Basic Protein immunology, T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory immunology
- Abstract
Our previous work has shown that specific peripheral immune tolerance induced by the intravenous administration of ECDI-fixed, antigen-coupled syngeneic splenocytes is an extremely efficient method for prevention and treatment of chronic relapsing experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (R-EAE) in susceptible SJL/J mice. The current study examined the mechanisms by which unresponsiveness is induced in primed encephalitogenic T cells. The results indicate that the inhibition of MBP-specific T cells by the i.v. injection of MBP-coupled splenocytes is not due to the induction of antigen-specific regulatory T cells, but rather to the induction of anergy/deletion of the effector cells. This conclusion is supported by the findings that spleen or lymph node cells isolated from MBP-tolerant mice fail to inhibit the adoptive transfer of R-EAE in cotransfer assays, and that tolerance is not inhibited by prior thymectomy or prior treatment with cyclophosphamide or anti-CD8 monoclonal antibody. In contrast, we demonstrate that splenocytes from MBP-tolerized, asymptomatic mice have a significantly reduced ability to serially transfer R-EAE to naive secondary recipients following antigen re-activation in vitro, in the first several weeks following tolerization, but that the ability to serially transfer R-EAE returns to sham tolerant control levels within 1-2 months. We also demonstrate a significantly reduced precursor frequency of MBP-specific, IL-2-producing T cells in the MBP-tolerant within three days of treatment. Collectively, the data most closely support a model wherein inhibition of MBP-specific encephalitogenic CD4+ effector T cells by i.v. injected MBP-coupled splenocytes is due to the direct induction of anergy/deletion from which they can recover over time.
- Published
- 1998
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