1. A minimum number of autoimmune T cells to induce autoimmunity?
- Author
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Bosch AJT, Bolinger B, Keck S, Stepanek O, Ozga AJ, Galati-Fournier V, Stein JV, and Palmer E
- Subjects
- Adoptive Transfer, Animals, Antigen Presentation, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes cytology, Dendritic Cells immunology, Disease Models, Animal, Immune Tolerance, Lymph Nodes cytology, Lymph Nodes immunology, Mice, Mice, Transgenic, Ovalbumin immunology, Autoimmune Diseases immunology, Autoimmunity, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental immunology
- Abstract
While autoimmune T cells are present in most individuals, only a minority of the population suffers from an autoimmune disease. To better appreciate the limits of T cell tolerance, we carried out experiments to determine how many autoimmune T cells are required to initiate an experimental autoimmune disease. Variable numbers of autoimmune OT-I T cells were transferred into RIP-OVA mice, which were injected with antigen-loaded DCs in a single footpad; this restricted T cell priming to a few OT-I T cells that are present in the draining popliteal lymph node. Using selective plane illumination microscopy (SPIM) we counted the number of OT-I T cells present in the popliteal lymph node at the time of priming. Analysis of our data suggests that a single autoimmune T cell cannot induce an experimental autoimmune disease, but a "quorum" of 2-5 autoimmune T cells clearly has this capacity., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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