Beijleveld L J, Damoiseaux J G, Wodzig K W, Van Breda Vriesman P J
Department of Immunology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Limburg, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
Transplantation. 1995 Jun 15;59(11):1601-5.
The thymus-dependent model of cyclosporine-induced autoimmunity (CsA-AI) in the Lewis rat requires a lethal total body X-irradiation and rescue with syngeneic or autologous bone marrow and cyclosporine (CsA) administration for at least 4 weeks; two to three weeks after cessation of CsA, the animals develop a graft-versus-host-like disease. The obligatory role of the thymus in the etiology of CsA-AI has been established unequivocally, but the way in which disease is thymus dependent is a topic of debate. In the present study we demonstrate that the model of CsA-AI requires the presence of a thymus for at least 2 weeks after total body irradiation and CsA administration, but that X-irradiation of the thymus itself is not necessary to bring about disease. Transplantation of neonatal thymus shows in addition that in the absence of X-irradiation of the thymus, CsA therapy is required to generate autoreactive cells, but that disease occurs only if peripheral autoregulatory cells are eliminated by X-irradiation.