Kojima K, Berger T, Lassmann H, Hinze-Selch D, Zhang Y, Gehrmann J, Reske K, Wekerle H, Linington C
Department of Neuroimmunology, Max-Planck Institute for Psychiatry, Martinsried, Germany.
J Exp Med. 1994 Sep 1;180(3):817-29. doi: 10.1084/jem.180.3.817.
The pathogenic potential of autoimmune T cell responses to nonmyelin autoantigens was investigated in the Lewis rat using the astrocyte-derived calcium binding protein S100 beta, as a model nonmyelin autoantigen. The Lewis rat mounts a vigorous RT1B1 (major histocompatibility complex class II) restricted autoimmune response to an immunodominant S100 beta epitope (amino acid residues 76-91). The adoptive transfer of S100 beta-specific T cell lines induced a severe inflammatory response in the nervous system, but only minimal neurological dysfunction in naive syngeneic recipients. The inability of S100 beta-specific T cell transfer to induce severe disease was associated with a decreased recruitment of ED1+ macrophages into the central nervous system (CNS) in comparison with that seen in severe experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) induced by the adoptive transfer of myelin basic protein (MBP)-specific T line cells. Moreover, unlike encephalitogenic MBP-specific T cell lines, S100 beta-specific T cell lines exhibited no cytotoxic activity in vitro. Histopathological analysis also revealed striking differences in the distribution of inflammatory lesions in MBP- and S100 beta-specific T cell-mediated disease. In contrast to the MBP paradigm, S100 beta-specific T cell transfer induces intense inflammation not only in the spinal cord, but throughout the entire CNS and also in the uvea and retina of the eye. In view of the distribution of lesions throughout the grey and white matter of the CNS we propose to term this new model experimental autoimmune panencephalomyelitis (EAP) to differentiate it from EAE. These experiments demonstrate for the first time that nonmyelin CNS autoantigens can initiate a pathogenic autoimmune T cell response, although the nature of the target autoantigen profoundly influences the clinical and histopathological characteristics of the resulting autoimmune disease. This is not simply a consequence of the distribution of the autoantigen, as both MBP and S100 beta are coexpressed in many areas of the CNS, but reflects differences in the capacity of different regions of the CNS to process and present specific autoantigens. This new model of T cell-mediated autoimmune CNS disease exhibits a number of similarities to multiple sclerosis (MS), such as its mild clinical course and the involvement of areas of the brain and eye, which are absent in myelin-mediated models of EAE. Nonmyelin autoantigens may therefore play an unexpectedly important role in the immunopathogenesis of inflammatory diseases of the CNS.
利用星形胶质细胞衍生的钙结合蛋白S100β作为非髓鞘自身抗原模型,在Lewis大鼠中研究了自身免疫性T细胞对非髓鞘自身抗原的致病潜力。Lewis大鼠对免疫显性的S100β表位(氨基酸残基76 - 91)产生强烈的RT1B1(主要组织相容性复合体II类)限制性自身免疫反应。S100β特异性T细胞系的过继转移在神经系统中诱导了严重的炎症反应,但在同基因未致敏受体中仅引起轻微的神经功能障碍。与髓鞘碱性蛋白(MBP)特异性T细胞系过继转移诱导的严重实验性自身免疫性脑脊髓炎(EAE)相比,S100β特异性T细胞转移未能诱导严重疾病与ED1 +巨噬细胞向中枢神经系统(CNS)的募集减少有关。此外,与致脑炎性MBP特异性T细胞系不同,S100β特异性T细胞系在体外没有细胞毒性活性。组织病理学分析还揭示了MBP和S100β特异性T细胞介导的疾病中炎症病变分布的显著差异。与MBP模式不同,S100β特异性T细胞转移不仅在脊髓中诱导强烈炎症,而且在整个CNS以及眼的葡萄膜和视网膜中也诱导强烈炎症。鉴于病变在CNS灰质和白质中的分布,我们建议将这种新模型称为实验性自身免疫性全脑脊髓炎(EAP),以将其与EAE区分开来。这些实验首次证明非髓鞘CNS自身抗原可引发致病性自身免疫性T细胞反应,尽管靶自身抗原的性质深刻影响所产生的自身免疫性疾病的临床和组织病理学特征。这不仅仅是自身抗原分布的结果,因为MBP和S100β在CNS的许多区域共表达,而是反映了CNS不同区域处理和呈递特定自身抗原能力的差异。这种T细胞介导的自身免疫性CNS疾病新模型与多发性硬化症(MS)有许多相似之处,如临床病程较轻以及脑和眼的区域受累,而这些在髓鞘介导的EAE模型中不存在。因此,非髓鞘自身抗原可能在CNS炎症性疾病的免疫发病机制中发挥意想不到的重要作用。