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Publication : Restriction of the TCR repertoire inhibits the development of memory T cells and prevents autoimmunity in lpr mice.

First Author  Perkins DL Year  1996
Journal  J Immunol Volume  156
Issue  12 Pages  4961-8
PubMed ID  8648148 Mgi Jnum  J:33404
Mgi Id  MGI:80885 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.156.12.4961
Citation  Perkins DL, et al. (1996) Restriction of the TCR repertoire inhibits the development of memory T cells and prevents autoimmunity in lpr mice. J Immunol 156(12):4961-8
abstractText  The lpr mutation, a disruption of the fas gene, induces spontaneous autoimmunity characterized by high titers of autoantibodies, lymphadenopathy, autoreactive T cells, and early mortality. The mechanism of autoimmunity, however, remains unknown. The driving force for disease could result from the T cell recognition of autoantigen or, alternatively, an intrinsic T cell defect that promotes autoreactivity. We investigated the role of antigen-TCR interaction in the pathogenesis of lpr autoimmunity by transferring the DO-11.10 TCR beta-chain transgene (Vbeta8.2-Dbeta1.1-Jbeta1.1) to the MRL-lpr/lpr background producing the MRL-lprbeta strain. Our results show that the MRL-lpr beta transgenic strain has increased survival, lower titers of autoantibodies, and decreased lymphadenopathy compared with nontransgenic littermates. These beneficial effects were associated with decreased expansion of CD4+ T cells expressing memory phenotypes (CD44+, CD45RB-, and LECAM-) in the transgenic compared with nontransgenic strains. A role for impaired recognition of autoantigen by T cells expressing the TCR transgene was suggested by comparing the phenotypes of Vbeta8.2+ (transgene+) vs Vbeta8.2- (transgene-) CD4+ T cells within the transgenic mice. These experiments show that Vbeta8.2- T cells, which express endogenously rearranged TCR, are the major contributors to the expansion of memory T cells in the transgenic mice. In contrast, T cells with memory phenotypes expand similarly in both the Vbeta8.2+ and Vbeta8.2- subsets of nontransgenic mice. Based on these results, we hypothesize that TCR recognition of autoantigen is a major contributor to autoimmunity in lpr mice and that T cells expressing a memory phenotype are perpetrators of this process.
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