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Publication : Autoreactive T cells promote post-traumatic healing in the central nervous system.

First Author  Hofstetter HH Year  2003
Journal  J Neuroimmunol Volume  134
Issue  1-2 Pages  25-34
PubMed ID  12507769 Mgi Jnum  J:119263
Mgi Id  MGI:3701596 Doi  10.1016/s0165-5728(02)00358-2
Citation  Hofstetter HH, et al. (2003) Autoreactive T cells promote post-traumatic healing in the central nervous system. J Neuroimmunol 134(1-2):25-34
abstractText  In general, autoimmune responses are considered harmful to the host. In the best-defined model of autoimmune disease, murine experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE), for example, brain-protein-specific autoimmune responses of both major classes, type-1 and type-2, have been implicated in causing brain pathology. We induced type-1 and type-2 autoimmunity to myelin oligodendrocyte protein (MOG) in C57.BL/6 mice. Instead of using pertussis toxin (PTX) to open the blood-brain barrier (BBB), which is the classic procedure, we set an aseptic cerebral injury (ACI) to see what the consequences of pre-primed, autoreactive type-1 and type-2 memory T cells gaining access to the brain in the course of sterile tissue injury would be. Neither of these autoimmune response types induced pathology; on the contrary, both accelerated re-vascularization and post-traumatic healing. The data suggest that induction of either type-1 or type-2 autoimmune responses is not inherently noxious to the host, but can have beneficial effects on tissue repair. Autoimmune pathology may develop only if molecules of microbial origin such as pertussis toxin additionally induce the 'infectious nonself/danger' reaction in the antigen-presenting cells (APC) of the target organ itself.
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