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Publication : Autoreactive Th1 cells activate monocytes to support regional Th17 responses in inflammatory arthritis.

First Author  Simons DM Year  2013
Journal  J Immunol Volume  190
Issue  7 Pages  3134-41
PubMed ID  23420889 Mgi Jnum  J:194460
Mgi Id  MGI:5473904 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.1203212
Citation  Simons DM, et al. (2013) Autoreactive Th1 cells activate monocytes to support regional th17 responses in inflammatory arthritis. J Immunol 190(7):3134-41
abstractText  We have examined mechanisms underlying the formation of pathologic Th17 cells using a transgenic mouse model in which autoreactive CD4(+) T cells recognize influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA) as a ubiquitously expressed self-Ag and induce inflammatory arthritis. The lymph nodes of arthritic mice contain elevated numbers of inflammatory monocytes (iMO) with an enhanced capacity to promote CD4(+) Th17 cell differentiation, and a regional inflammatory response develops in the paw-draining lymph nodes by an IL-17-dependent mechanism. The activation of these Th17-trophic iMO precedes arthritis development and occurs in the context of an autoreactive CD4(+) Th1 cell response. Adoptive transfer of HA-specific CD4(+) T cells into nonarthritic mice expressing HA as a self-Ag similarly led to the formation of Th1 cells and of iMO that could support Th17 cell formation, and, notably, the accumulation of these iMO in the lymph nodes was blocked by IFN-gamma neutralization. These studies show that autoreactive CD4(+) Th1 cells directed to a systemically distributed self-Ag can promote the development of a regional Th17 cell inflammatory response by driving the recruitment of Th17-trophic iMO to the lymph nodes.
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