Department of Laboratory Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2013 Aug 27;110(35):E3311-20. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1300617110. Epub 2013 Aug 12.
Deletion of lyn, a Src-family tyrosine kinase expressed by B, myeloid, and dendritic cells (DCs), triggers lupus-like disease in mice, characterized by autoantibody production and renal immune complex deposition leading to chronic glomerulonephritis. B cells from these mice are hyperactive to antigen-receptor stimulation owing to a loss of inhibitory signaling mediated by Lyn kinase. The hyperactive B-cell responses are thought to underlie the development of autoimmunity in this model. Lyn-deficient mice also manifest significant myeloexpansion. To test the contribution of different immune cell types to the lupus-like disease in this model, we generated a lyn(flox/flox) transgenic mouse strain. To our surprise, when we crossed these mice to Cd11c-cre animals, generating DC-specific deletion of Lyn, the animals developed spontaneous B- and T-cell activation and subsequent production of autoantibodies and severe nephritis. Remarkably, the DC-specific Lyn-deficient mice also developed severe tissue inflammatory disease, which was not present in the global lyn(-/-) strain. Lyn-deficient DCs were hyperactivated and hyperresponsive to Toll-like receptor agonists and IL-1β. To test whether dysregulation of these signaling pathways in DCs contributed to the inflammatory/autoimmune phenotype, we crossed the lyn(f/f) Cd11c-cre(+) mice to myd88(f/f) animals, generating double-mutant mice lacking both Lyn and the adaptor protein myeloid differentiation factor 88 (MyD88) in DCs, specifically. Deletion of MyD88 in DCs alone completely reversed the inflammatory autoimmunity in the DC-specific Lyn-mutant mice. Thus, we demonstrate that hyperactivation of MyD88-dependent signaling in DCs is sufficient to drive pathogenesis of lupus-like disease, illuminating the fact that dysregulation in innate immune cells alone can lead to autoimmunity.
lyn 是一种在 B 细胞、髓样细胞和树突状细胞(DC)中表达的Src 家族酪氨酸激酶,其缺失会导致小鼠出现狼疮样疾病,表现为自身抗体产生和导致慢性肾小球肾炎的肾脏免疫复合物沉积。由于 Lyn 激酶介导的抑制信号缺失,这些小鼠的 B 细胞对抗原受体刺激过度活跃。这种 B 细胞的过度活跃反应被认为是该模型中自身免疫发生的基础。lyn 缺陷小鼠还表现出明显的髓系细胞扩张。为了测试不同免疫细胞类型在该模型中狼疮样疾病中的作用,我们生成了 lyn(flox/flox)转基因小鼠品系。令我们惊讶的是,当我们将这些小鼠与 Cd11c-cre 动物杂交,生成 DC 特异性 Lyn 缺失时,动物出现自发性 B 和 T 细胞激活,随后产生自身抗体和严重的肾炎。值得注意的是,DC 特异性 Lyn 缺陷小鼠也发生严重的组织炎症性疾病,而在全局 lyn(-/-)品系中不存在这种疾病。Lyn 缺陷的 DC 过度激活并对 Toll 样受体激动剂和 IL-1β过度反应。为了测试 DC 中这些信号通路的失调是否导致炎症/自身免疫表型,我们将 lyn(f/f) Cd11c-cre(+)小鼠与 myd88(f/f)动物杂交,生成特异性在 DC 中缺失 Lyn 和衔接蛋白髓样分化因子 88(MyD88)的双突变小鼠。在 DC 中单独缺失 MyD88 完全逆转了 DC 特异性 Lyn 突变小鼠的炎症性自身免疫。因此,我们证明了 DC 中 MyD88 依赖性信号的过度激活足以驱动狼疮样疾病的发病机制,这阐明了仅固有免疫细胞失调就可导致自身免疫的事实。