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Publication : Development of spontaneous autoimmune peripheral polyneuropathy in B7-2-deficient NOD mice.

First Author  Salomon B Year  2001
Journal  J Exp Med Volume  194
Issue  5 Pages  677-84
PubMed ID  11535635 Mgi Jnum  J:71352
Mgi Id  MGI:2149865 Doi  10.1084/jem.194.5.677
Citation  Salomon B, et al. (2001) Development of spontaneous autoimmune peripheral polyneuropathy in B7-2-deficient NOD mice. J Exp Med 194(5):677-84
abstractText  An increasing number of studies have documented the central role of T cell costimulation in autoimmunity. Here we show that the autoimmune diabetes-prone nonobese diabetic (NOD) mouse strain, deficient in B7-2 costimulation, is protected from diabetes but develops a spontaneous autoimmune peripheral polyneuropathy. All the female and one third of the male mice exhibited limb paralysis with histologic and electrophysiologic evidence of severe demyelination in the peripheral nerves beginning at 20 wk of age. No central nervous system lesions were apparent. The peripheral nerve tissue was infiltrated with dendritic cells, CD4(+), and CD8(+) T cells. Finally, CD4(+) T cells isolated from affected animals induced the disease in NOD.SCID mice. Thus, the B7-2-deficient NOD mouse constitutes the first model of a spontaneous autoimmune disease of the peripheral nervous system, which has many similarities to the human disease, chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP). This model demonstrates that NOD mice have 'cryptic' autoimmune defects that can polarize toward the nervous tissue after the selective disruption of CD28/B7-2 costimulatory pathway.
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