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Query: UMLS:C0014070 (
encephalomyelitis
)
13,017
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In this brief review, we outline the properties of the new macrolide immunosuppressant FK-506. This selective anti-T cell agent has a similar mode of action to cyclospirin A (CSA). It is, however, more powerful, has the capacity (unlike CSA) to reverse liver allograft rejection and appears to have a higher therapeutic index than CSA in patients receiving organ transplants. Preliminary data suggest that renal function is better in recipients of liver transplants given FK-506 as primary therapy compared with those given CSA. In addition, evidence has been presented that FK-506-treated patients have shorter hospital stay than those receiving treatment with CSA. Other factors require to be taken into account, but it may be that it will prove less expensive in the future to treat patients with FK-506 than with CSA. The potential of FK-506 for the control of autoimmune diseases has been demonstrated in rodent models of rheumatoid arthritis, type I
diabetes
, posterior uveitis, allergic
encephalomyelitis
and glomerulonephritis. In the clinical field, FK-506 has been used in two cases of nephrotic syndrome resulting from glomerulonephritis; there was improvement in proteinuria and no decline in renal function. Studies to date have been restricted to one clinical centre although many hundreds of organ graft recipients have been studied. Both longer term and multi-centre investigations are urgently required, but it appears that FK-506 may offer considerable potential as an immunotherapeutic agent.
...
PMID:[FK-506. A new immunosuppressive drug]. 170 17
For many induced and spontaneous autoimmune diseases, a predominant role for T cells in the organ-specific destruction process has been shown. In one of the induced models of autoimmunity, experimental allergic
encephalomyelitis
(EAE), a very small heterogeneity of T-cell receptor (TcR) molecules is expressed by the pathogenic T cells in both rats and mice. Contrary to induced autoimmune diseases, little is known about the autoantigens recognized by these autoimmune T cells and the heterogeneity of their TcR in spontaneous autoimmune diseases. The aim of this work was to establish a system which allows characterization of relevant autoantigens in spontaneous insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(IDDM) in non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice. A completely different approach was taken to characterize the gene products of the minor lymphocyte stimulatory (Mls) loci. These gene products are responsible for the clonal elimination or the clonal stimulation of T cells expressing particular TcR V beta genes and therefore could be implicated in induction of autoimmune diseases by oligoclonal T-cell populations. The finding that Mls antigens are encoded by retroviral sequences leads to the hypothesis that viruses could be the inducing agents of autoimmune diseases.
...
PMID:Limited heterogeneity of autoantigens and T cells in autoimmune diseases? 175 24
Nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice spontaneously develop an autoimmune form of
diabetes
associated with insulitis. A number of immunomodulatory therapies have been investigated as a treatment for the disease process. Oral administration of the autoantigens myelin basic protein and collagen type II suppresses experimental models of
encephalomyelitis
and arthritis. We have now found that oral administration of insulin delays the onset and reduces the incidence of
diabetes
in NOD mice over a 1-year period in animals administered 1 mg of porcine insulin orally twice a week for 5 weeks and then weekly until 1 year of age. As expected, orally administered insulin had no metabolic effect on blood glucose levels. The severity of lymphocytic infiltration of pancreatic islets was also reduced by oral administration of insulin. Furthermore, splenic T cells from animals orally treated with insulin adoptively transfer protection against
diabetes
, demonstrating that oral insulin administration generates active cellular mechanisms that suppress disease. These results show that oral insulin affects
diabetes
and the pancreatic cellular inflammatory process in the NOD mouse and raise the possibility that oral administration of insulin or other pancreatic autoantigens may provide a new approach for the treatment of autoimmune
diabetes
.
...
PMID:Suppression of diabetes in nonobese diabetic mice by oral administration of porcine insulin. 194 45
Using the patch-clamp technique in combination with fluorescence microscopy we have found an abnormality in voltage-gated K+ channel expression in T cells that represents the first molecular marker linking three disparate autoimmune diseases in mice. CD4-CD8-Thy-1.2+ (double-negative or DN) lymphocytes from every known murine model for systemic lupus erythematosus, type-1
diabetes mellitus
and experimental allergic
encephalomyelitis
exhibit abnormally high numbers of an unusual K+ channel, termed type l compared to their phenotypic counterparts in normal mice. Other T cell subsets from these diseased mice retain their normal pattern of K+ channel expression. The unique K+ channel phenotype of DN T cells arises in parallel with the onset of autoimmunity. Although mitogen-activated T cells and rapidly proliferating thymocytes exhibit large numbers of K+ channels, these channels are of an electrophysiologically distinct type called n. Thus, abundant expression of type l K+ channels appears to be a useful marker for DN T cells associated with autoimmunity and may provide a valuable tool for delineating the role of DN T cells in the pathogenesis of autoimmune diseases.
...
PMID:Autoimmune diseases linked to abnormal K+ channel expression in double-negative CD4-CD8- T cells. 197 90
Expression of voltage-gated K+ channels in mAb-defined T cell subsets from normal mice and mice with experimental autoimmune arthritis was studied with the patch-clamp whole-cell recording technique in combination with fluorescence microscopy. CD4+CD8- Th cells from DBA/1 LacJ mice with type II collagen arthritis expressed low levels of type n K+ channels, and CD4-CD8+ T cells (cytotoxic) showed small numbers of type l or n' K+ channels, like their phenotypic counterparts in normal mice. CD4-CD8-Thy-1.2+ (double negative or DN) T cells from the diseased mice, however, displayed an abundance of type l K+ channels compared to DN T cells in normal mice, or mice immunized with CFA. Furthermore, the aberrant expression of type l K+ channels correlated with the presence of active disease. DN T cells from mice with SLE, type-1
diabetes mellitus
, and experimental allergic
encephalomyelitis
, also exhibited a high number of type l K+ channels. These results suggest that expression of numerous type l K+ channels may be a useful marker for DN T cells associated with these autoimmune disorders.
...
PMID:CD4-CD8- T cells from mice with collagen arthritis display aberrant expression of type l K+ channels. 197 26
Nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice spontaneously develop a T-cell-mediated autoimmune disease that is similar in many respects to insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
in humans. T-cell clones that specifically recognize pancreatic islet cell antigens can be derived from NOD mice, and most of these have been diabetogenic upon transfer to healthy recipients. We report herein the sequences of the T-cell receptor alpha and beta chains from four NOD-derived, islet-specific clones. The sequences are quite heterogeneous--in the junctional regions, specifically--so there seems to be little hope for treating this disease with specific anti-T-cell receptor reagents. This result contrasts with the strikingly restricted junctional region sequences reported for the receptors on clones derived from mice with experimental allergic
encephalomyelitis
, another T-cell-mediated autoimmune disease. We discuss possible explanations for this difference.
...
PMID:Islet-specific T-cell clones from nonobese diabetic mice express heterogeneous T-cell receptors. 206 98
Viruses can initiate disease by many different means. Direct viral, immune mediated and host factors all play important parts. Molecular mimicry or having cross-reacting determinants that result in immune responses which have the potential to cause damage can be incorporated into this framework. Here, autoimmune responses generated by virus infection have been presented in relation to these other parameters. The cross-reacting immune response originally generated by virus would have to be directed toward or involve a disease inducing site such as an EAE (encephalitogenic), thyroiditis, or diabetogenic site. If the cross-reaction took place at a nondisease inducing site, the ensuring immune response may result in the production of autoantibodies, however no disease would occur. In other systems autoantibodies can potentiate an ongoing inflammatory response. This may be the case that is described here with Theiler's murine
encephalomyelitis
virus infection. Lastly, viruses having common determinants with MHC determinants may modify immune responses leading to immunosuppression and allowing virus to persist. In addition, similar determinants may lead to disease by an alternative route. For example, we have described a region of human cytomegalovirus that has a common determinant with HLA DR beta chain. This region is associated with
diabetes
in humans (Todd et al. 1988). Thus, many factors are involved in the outcome of disease induction by viruses of which autoimmunity is one.
...
PMID:Is Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus infection of mice an autoimmune disease? 253 48
Allele-specific monoclonal anti-I-A antibodies are capable of specifically suppressing the immune response to antigens under the control of the allele towards which the antibody is directed, without suppressing the response to antigens under the control of the alternative allele of the I-A alpha and beta chain genes in an F1 heterozygote. This phenomenon, which has been termed 'allele-specific immunosuppression', is antigen-specific, long-lasting and transferrable with Thy-1-positive spleen cells. This type of immunosuppression has been applied to animal models of autoimmune disease, in both homozygous and heterozygous animal models. Anti-I-A monoclonal antibodies are capable of preventing, suppressing and treating experimental allergic
encephalomyelitis
(EAE), of partially suppressing experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis, and of preventing the onset of type I insulin-dependent
diabetes
in the BB/W diabetic rat. In addition, this type of immunotherapy has succeeded in almost completely suppressing nephritis in NZB X NZW F1 mice, which normally develop severe lupus-like nephritis. Significant toxicity, which may be due to anti-allotype antibodies, anti-idiotype antibodies, or to impurities in the monoclonal antibody preparations, has been encountered in the BB/W diabetic rat. In addition, attempts to extend these observations to EAE in the cynomolgus monkey have encountered significant mortality which appears to be attributable to the monoclonal antibody injections (anti-HLA-DR). The mechanism of this toxicity and means of circumventing it are currently under investigation. These results demonstrate the critical role of I-A molecules in the induction and continuance of the autoimmune process in these experimental animal models.
...
PMID:Monoclonal anti-Ia antibody therapy in animal models of autoimmune disease. 331 1
Cyclosporine is an 11 aminoacid cyclic peptide of fungal origin endowed with potent immunosuppressive activity. Unlike the conventional immunosuppressants, cyclosporine does not interfere with DNA metabolism, but it selectively and reversibly inhibits lymphocyte T-helper activation by inhibiting the production of interleukin-2 which plays a role in immune response development. Cyclosporine has little effect on lymphocytes B and does not modify the production of antibodies when it is in progress. The drug is effective in preventing spontaneous or autoantigen-induced auto-immune diseases in animals. The best studied models are experimental allergic
encephalomyelitis
, uveitis in the rat and spontaneous
diabetes
of BB rats. However, cyclosporine has no effect on diseases exclusively due to the pathogenic action of antibodies, such as spontaneous thyroiditis of the obese chicken. It is also possible to obtain a curative effect, this type of model being nearer to therapeutic conditions in humans than the previous models.
...
PMID:[Cyclosporin and autoimmune diseases. 1: Experimental bases]. 355 Sep 87
Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II genes are the strongest susceptibility markers for many human autoimmune diseases. A perplexing aspect of this is that HLA alleles can confer either susceptibility or dominant protection. In nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice, the strongest known
diabetes
susceptibility locus is within the MHC and is presumed to be the H-2Ag7 product. When NOD mice carry a transgenic E alpha d molecule allowing expression of an H-2E heterodimer,
diabetes
is prevented. We investigated whether, as in human autoimmunity, a single class II heterodimer might protect from some autoimmune diseases while predisposing to others. NOD mice are susceptible to experimental autoimmune
encephalomyelitis
(EAE) induced by the proteolipoprotein (PLP) epitope 56-70. Susceptibility to EAE was analyzed in NOD mice which either have or lack transgenic H-2E expression. We found that H-2E expression in NOD mice has converse effects on
diabetes
and EAE: while
diabetes
is prevented, EAE is greatly exacerbated and leads to demyelination. Although PLP 56-70 could be presented both in the context of H-2A and H-2E, increased disease severity in H-2E transgenic mice could not be attributed either to an enhanced T cell proliferative response to PLP or to differences in determinant spread. However, cytokine analysis of the response revealed important differences between NOD mice and their H-2E transgenic counterparts: H-2E expression was associated with reduced interleukin-4 secretion and enhanced interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) secretion by lymph node cells, while the response of central nervous system infiltrating T cells displayed a markedly enhanced IFN-gamma response. Thus, whether a particular class II molecule confers resistance or susceptibility to an autoimmune disease may depend on differential cytokine profiles elicited by particular class II/autoantigen complexes.
...
PMID:Exacerbated autoimmunity associated with a T helper-1 cytokine profile shift in H-2E-transgenic mice. 748 54
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