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Publication : Loss of Roquin induces early death and immune deregulation but not autoimmunity.

First Author  Bertossi A Year  2011
Journal  J Exp Med Volume  208
Issue  9 Pages  1749-56
PubMed ID  21844204 Mgi Jnum  J:177784
Mgi Id  MGI:5296274 Doi  10.1084/jem.20110578
Citation  Bertossi A, et al. (2011) Loss of Roquin induces early death and immune deregulation but not autoimmunity. J Exp Med 208(9):1749-56
abstractText  The substitution of one amino acid in the Roquin protein by the sanroque mutation induces a dramatic autoimmune syndrome in mice. This is believed to occur through ectopic expression of inducible T cell co-stimulator (ICOS) and unrestrained differentiation of follicular T helper cells, which induce spontaneous germinal center reactions to self-antigens. In this study, we demonstrate that tissue-specific ablation of Roquin in T or B cells, in the entire hematopoietic system, or in epithelial cells of transplanted thymi did not cause autoimmunity. Loss of Roquin induced elevated expression of ICOS through T cell-intrinsic and -extrinsic mechanisms, which itself was not sufficient to break self-tolerance. Instead, ablation of Roquin in the hematopoietic system caused defined changes in immune homeostasis, including the expansion of macrophages, eosinophils, and T cell subsets, most dramatically CD8 effector-like T cells, through cell-autonomous and nonautonomous mechanisms. Germline Roquin deficiency led to perinatal lethality, which was partially rescued on the genetic background of an outbred strain. However, not even complete absence of Roquin resulted in overt self-reactivity, suggesting that the sanroque mutation induces autoimmunity through an as yet unknown mechanism.
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