Mattsson L, Larsson P, Erlandsson-Harris H, Klareskog L, Harris R A
Division of Rheumatology and Neuroimmunology Unit, Centre for Molecular Medicine L8:04, Karolinska Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden.
Clin Exp Immunol. 2000 Dec;122(3):477-83. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2249.2000.01384.x.
Microbial infection can impact on the course of autoimmune disease, both in disease-inducing and disease-protecting capacities. Here we investigated if infection with Trypanosoma brucei brucei (Tbb), the protozoan causative agent of African Sleeping Sickness, could ameliorate the course of CIA in the Dark Agouti rat, an experimental model which shares many features with human rheumatoid arthritis. Infection of animals with living, but not inoculation with dead Tbb resulted in complete or significant reduction of clinical arthritic symptoms. Infection prior to collagen immunization was more effective than a later treatment, and this effect was related to the level of parasitaemia. Using reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction we detected an increase in interferon-gamma mRNA in the draining lymph nodes of Tbb-treated animals relative to controls at day 28 after disease induction. Transforming growth factor-beta could be detected in the lymph nodes in four out of six animals that had received Tbb. In the joints, immunohistochemistry revealed reduced production of tumour necrosis factor-alpha in Tbb-treated animals relative to controls. The most striking difference between Tbb-infected and control groups, as measured by ELISA, was the down-regulation of anti-collagen II IgG antibody responses in parasite-infected animals. We conclude that live parasites can exert an immunomodulatory and protective effect in CIA in which several mechanisms may work in parallel, although the almost complete down-regulation of the anti-collagen antibody response may alone explain the protective effect in CIA. The described model may be useful in further attempts to use the mechanisms involved in parasite immune defence to prevent and treat certain autoimmune conditions.
微生物感染可在致病和抗病能力方面影响自身免疫性疾病的病程。在此,我们研究了布氏布氏锥虫(Tbb)感染,即非洲昏睡病的原生动物病原体,是否能改善黑褐家鼠胶原诱导性关节炎(CIA)的病程,该实验模型与人类类风湿关节炎有许多共同特征。用活的Tbb感染动物而非接种死的Tbb,可导致临床关节炎症状完全或显著减轻。胶原免疫前感染比后期治疗更有效,且这种效果与寄生虫血症水平有关。在疾病诱导后第28天,使用逆转录聚合酶链反应,我们检测到Tbb处理动物引流淋巴结中γ干扰素mRNA相对于对照组有所增加。在接受Tbb的六只动物中的四只动物的淋巴结中可检测到转化生长因子-β。在关节中,免疫组织化学显示Tbb处理动物相对于对照组肿瘤坏死因子-α的产生减少。通过酶联免疫吸附测定法测量,Tbb感染组和对照组之间最显著的差异是寄生虫感染动物中抗Ⅱ型胶原IgG抗体反应的下调。我们得出结论,活寄生虫可在CIA中发挥免疫调节和保护作用,其中几种机制可能并行起作用,尽管抗胶原抗体反应几乎完全下调可能单独解释CIA中的保护作用。所描述的模型可能有助于进一步尝试利用寄生虫免疫防御所涉及的机制来预防和治疗某些自身免疫性疾病。