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Publication : Genetic control of inflammatory arthritis and glomerulonephritis in congenic lpr mice and their F1 hybrids.

First Author  Gilkeson GS Year  1991
Journal  J Autoimmun Volume  4
Issue  4 Pages  595-606
PubMed ID  1777011 Mgi Jnum  J:1866
Mgi Id  MGI:50390 Doi  10.1016/0896-8411(91)90179-g
Citation  Gilkeson GS, et al. (1991) Genetic control of inflammatory arthritis and glomerulonephritis in congenic lpr mice and their F1 hybrids. J Autoimmun 4(4):595-606
abstractText  MRL-lpr/lpr mice spontaneously develop a complex immunological disease characterized by glomerulonephritis, inflammatory erosive arthritis and the production of rheumatoid factors (RF) and anti-DNA antibodies. We have previously reported that, of congenic lpr strains, only MRL-lpr/lpr mice develop synovial pathology suggesting that both the lpr gene and another gene(s) in the MRL background are necessary for the development of arthritis. To define further the genetics of arthritis and its relationship to glomerulonephritis and autoantibody production, we studied disease expression in MRL-lpr/lpr and C57BL/6-lpr/lpr mice and their offspring (BM-lpr/lpr and MB-lpr/lpr). At 6 months of age these mice were killed and bled, and their kidneys and knee joints were removed for pathological studies. Fourteen of 28 MB-lpr/lpr mice displayed synovial hypertrophy, while eight of 28 had significant synovial inflammation. BM-lpr/lpr mice showed similar changes: nine of 22 and eight of 22 exhibited synovial hypertrophy and inflammation respectively. Joints from MRL-lpr/lpr mice revealed 13 of 17 with synovial hypertrophy and 12 of 17 with inflammation, while none of 14 B6-lpr/lpr mice had synovial changes. Renal pathology was minimal in the F1 mice with only mild hypercellularity in seven of 21 MB-lpr/lpr and five of 22 BM-lpr/lpr mice. All MRL-lpr/lpr mice, in contrast, had marked glomerular changes with 12 of 17 exhibiting glomerular crescents. Only one F1 mouse had both arthritis and renal abnormalities. IgM RF levels were elevated in all four experimental groups, but did not correlate with the presence or severity of arthritis. IgG RF levels were elevated in the MB-lpr/lpr and MRL-lpr/lpr mice, but did not correlate with the degree of arthritis. These results indicate that renal disease and arthritis develop independently in lpr mice, possibly on a genetic basis, and that the presence and titer of autoantibodies do not correlate with tissue injury.
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