Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0014070 (encephalomyelitis)
13,017 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) is an animal autoimmune disease mediated by CD4+ T cells. Analysis of TCR expression revealed that limited TCR elements (V beta 8.2, V alpha 2 or 4) were utilized by myelin basic protein (MBP) specific T cells in mice with H-2u haplotype and Lewis rats. The usage of a particular beta chain complementarity determining region 3 (CDR3) motif has also been shown. However, it remains unclear to what extent these observations can be extrapolated. Here we studied the TCR sequences of MBP 89-101/I-A(s) specific T cell clones derived from SJL/J mice, using the polymerase chain reaction on reverse transcribed mRNA. Although the V beta usage was less restricted than in H-2u mice, they predominantly utilized V beta 17a and expressed LGG or related motifs in the V beta-D beta-J beta junctions. Furthermore, a single alpha chain rearrangement between V alpha 1.1 and J alpha BBM142 with no N region diversity was preferentially used. Concordantly, immunization with a peptide corresponding to the alpha chain CDR3 was found to significantly alter the clinical course of EAE. Comparison of the published TCR junctional regions demonstrates that the CDR3 motifs (LGG in beta chain, CA*R*NY motif in alpha chains) are expressed by other encephalitogenic clones. Notably, the CA*R*NY was conserved in PL/J mice clones that recognize a distinct MBP-MHC determinant. It suggests that an antigen-independent mechanism may contribute to conserving the alpha chain motif. The implications of these observations are discussed.
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PMID:Analysis of T cell antigen receptors of myelin basic protein specific T cells in SJL/J mice demonstrates an alpha chain CDR3 motif associated with encephalitogenic T cells. 752 42

TCR peptides, namely V beta 8.2-39-59 or the minimal idiotope, V beta 8-44-54, can treat experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) in Lewis rats, presumably by activating naturally induced TCR peptide-specific T cells that arise in response to the focused appearance of V beta 8.2+ encephalitogenic T cells. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the mechanisms by which TCR peptides inhibit EAE. We found that treatment of EAE with the V beta 8.2-39-59 peptide did not induce any evidence of DNA fragmentation (apoptosis) in spinal cord cells isolated from clinically well rats, implicating a regulatory rather than a deletional mechanism. TCR peptide-specific T cell lines failed to inhibit EAE induced by already activated BP-specific T cells when the two T cell specificities were co-injected. However, coculturing the encephalitogenic T cells in the presence of the regulatory T cells during the activation step before transfer almost completely inhibited the induction of EAE. Inhibition could be induced by direct contact between the two cell types or by soluble factors produced in a transwell system, but was greatly enhanced when soluble V beta 8.2-39-59 peptide was used to optimally activate the regulatory T cells. The inhibition was regulatory cell dose dependent, and was reflected in vitro by reduced proliferation response and mRNA production for IL-3, and to a lesser extent, IFN-gamma and IL-2. These results indicate that regulation induced by TCR peptides involves cell-cell interactions that lead to the production and release of soluble factors that locally inhibit the activation of encephalitogenic T cells expressing MHC-bound idiotopes of the target V beta-chain, and possibly "bystander" specificities expressing different V beta-chains.
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PMID:Coculture of TCR peptide-specific T cells with basic protein-specific T cells inhibits proliferation, IL-3 mRNA, and transfer of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. 752 21

BALB/c mice are resistant to disease induction when experimental protocols that induce experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) in susceptible strains of animals are used. We have previously described a panel of myelin basic protein (MBP)-specific CD4+ T cell clones from BALB/c mice, two of which induce moderate EAE when transferred to syngeneic recipients. These clones are I-E(d) restricted and recognize residues 151-160 of mouse MBP. Here, we describe a series of 17 MBP-reactive T cell clones, which were derived from two BALB/c mice. All are I-A(d) restricted and recognize nested epitopes in peptide 59-76 of mouse MBP. Four different TCR V beta chains are used by this panel of clones; these include V beta 8.2 (10/17), V beta 8.1 (2/17), V beta 7 (3/17), and V beta 14 (2/17). Twelve of fourteen clones tested adoptively transferred severe demyelinating EAE to syngeneic recipients. Studies of relative binding affinities of MBP peptides to class II molecules I-A(d) and I-E(d) show that peptide 59-76 binds with extremely high affinity to I-A(d), whereas three peptides that contains residues 151-160 bind poorly to I-E(d). These results are consistent with a growing number of reports that show that high affinity binding to class II is required for autoantigenic stimulation. Despite encephalitogenicity of 59-76-reactive T cells, active immunization of BALB/c mice with peptide 59-76 in adjuvant failed to induce either clinical or histologic signs of EAE. The implications of these findings for mechanisms of genetically determined EAE resistance are discussed.
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PMID:Experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis-resistant mice have highly encephalitogenic myelin basic protein (MBP)-specific T cell clones that recognize a MBP peptide with high affinity for MHC class II. 752 16

The ability of synthetic V region peptides to induce regulatory T cells and Abs in rodents and humans provides clear evidence that these idiotopes do not naturally induce tolerance. In this study, we investigated the ability of TCR V beta 8.2 peptides to experimentally induce specific T cell tolerance, as measured by loss of Ag-specific proliferation and delayed-type hypersensitivity responses, and by increased susceptibility to experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). We found that both neonatal and adult exposure to V beta 8.2-39-59 or V beta 8-44-54 peptides could induce efficient T cell tolerance, resulting in a significant inhibition of peptide-specific proliferative responses. In addition, neonatal tolerance resulted in a partial reduction in delayed-type hypersensitivity response and an inability to vaccinate against EAE after adult immunization with the tolerizing peptide. We further evaluated the contribution of naturally induced TCR-specific responses to EAE resistance induced by challenging neonatally or adult tolerized rats with myelin basic protein in adjuvant. The clinical course of EAE was not significantly altered in rats tolerized neonatally to V beta 8.2 peptides, but both the severity and incidence of mortality from EAE was increased in rats tolerized as adults with V beta 8.2 peptides conjugated to syngeneic splenocytes. These results demonstrate that V beta 8.2 peptides are tolerogenic as well as immunogenic. Moreover, the observation of different effects of neonatal vs adult tolerization on the course of EAE suggests either the emergence of additional protective idiotopes after neonatal tolerization and/or mechanistic differences in the two tolerance-inducing protocols. Most importantly, the enhancement of clinical EAE in rats tolerized as adults with V beta 8.2 peptides provides evidence for an innate regulatory role of the CDR2 idiotope in recovery from EAE.
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PMID:Increased severity of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis in rats tolerized as adults but not neonatally to a protective TCR V beta 8 CDR2 idiotope. 752 91

Superantigens have been suggested to act as powerful TCR V beta-specific inducers of T cell reactivity in autoimmune diseases. We have investigated the capacity of staphylococcal enterotoxins (SE) to prime autoreactive T cell responses in naive animals in the Lewis rat model of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), where myelin basic protein (MBP)-specific CD4+ effector T cells express almost exclusively V beta 8.2 TCR elements. By taking advantage of the reactivity of V beta 8.2+ MBP-specific T cells to SEE but not to other SEs in vitro, we estimated the potential of different SEs (SEA, SEB, and SEE) to induce a primary T cell response to soluble MBP in vivo. Upon immunization of naive rats with soluble MBP alone or MBP and SEB (which is only a very weak superantigen for rat T cells), no MBP-responses could be retrieved. Similarly, when coimmunizing naive rats with MBP and V beta 8.2-activating SEE, no autoreactivity was inducible. By contrast, coimmunization of animals with soluble MBP and the superantigen SEA that is strongly activating various T cell subpopulations in Lewis rats but not V beta 8.2+ (i.e., potentially MBP reactive) T cells led to a significant primary MBP-specific T cell autoreactivity. These SEA-induced MBP-reactive T cells expressed V beta 8.2 TCRs at levels similar to those seen in autoreactive T cells conventionally induced by immunization with MBP administered in complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA) and could induce disease in a transfer model of EAE. Thus, our results are consistent with the notion that superantigens are able to induce primary T cell responses to soluble autoantigens by a non-V beta specific mechanism of bystander priming.
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PMID:Superantigens induce primary T cell responses to soluble autoantigens by a non-V beta-specific mechanism of bystander activation. 753 95

Several stimuli induce mature T cells to undergo apoptosis or programmed cell death (PCD) including specific Ag. We have demonstrated previously that Ag induces the death of encephalitogenic T cells in vitro and deletion in vivo, leading to amelioration of autoimmune encephalomyelitis. We have now examined whether activated, myelin basic protein (MBP)-specific human T cells may be eliminated by Ag-induced PCD. We demonstrate that activated MBP-specific T cell lines (TCL) undergo the classic nuclear morphologic changes and DNA fragmentation characteristic of apoptosis when given a TCR challenge. We found evidence that two mechanisms led to apoptosis: a propriocidal mechanism that was highly Ag-specific and dependent on the dose of exogenously added rIL-2, and a cytolytic mechanism in which MBP-specific TCL lysed B cell targets and engaged in considerable "fratricidal" cytolysis of other MBP-specific T cells. These two pathways leading to MBP-specific apoptotic death could be distinguished by their glucocorticoid sensitivity. Glucocorticoid treatment significantly blocked MBP-induced propriocidal apoptosis but had no effect on T cell cytolysis of B cell targets. Although it has been proposed that autoimmune disease could result from the failure of normal deletional mechanisms, this preliminary survey of MBP-reactive mature TCL from multiple sclerosis patients revealed that such cells are highly susceptible to TCR-induced PCD and comparable with TCL from normal subjects. Thus, therapeutic strategies based on Ag-induced PCD of T lymphocytes may be feasible in man.
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PMID:Two mechanisms of antigen-specific apoptosis of myelin basic protein (MBP)-specific T lymphocytes derived from multiple sclerosis patients and normal individuals. 753 45

Rats of the LER inbred strain are resistant to the active induction of experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE), although they are susceptible to adoptively transferred EAE when they are injected with encephalitogenic T cells from EAE-susceptible Lewis rats. The mechanism of resistance remains to be elucidated. We report here that myelin basic protein (MBP)-specific T cells can be cloned from LER rats immunized with MBP, that these CD4+ LER T cells can recognize the encephalitogenic peptide (MBP-EP) and will divide vigorously when it is presented to them, and that these T cells bear V beta 8 + TCR chains. Nevertheless, in contrast to Lewis T cells with the same specificity and TCR beta chains, LER T cells from MBP-EP-specific clones cannot induce EAE when adoptively transferred into naive rats of either strain. Thus, LER T cells can assemble and use a TCR with the canonical encephalitogenic V beta 8.2-D beta-J beta region in response to immunization with MBP, yet they continue to display resistance to EAE.
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PMID:Cloning of myelin basic protein-reactive T cells from the experimental allergic encephalomyelitis-resistant rat strain, LER. 754 Oct 54

Experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) is an autoimmune disease induced by immunization with myelin basic protein (MBP), proteolipid protein, or encephalitogenic peptides from these myelin components. EAE resembles basic protein multiple sclerosis in some of its clinical and histologic features, and serves as an experimental model for this and other autoimmune diseases. In this study, we examine i.v. peptide therapy of EAE in detail, and show that repeated i.v. injections of MBP peptides effectively treat EAE in (PLJxSJL)F1 mice. In this study, administration of the immunodominant epitope (MBP Ac1-11) prevents MBP-induced disease, whereas the subdominant epitope MBP 31-47 is neither required nor sufficient. Intravenous administration of substituted MBP peptide analogues is also effective in treating EAE, provided the peptide side chains presumed to be involved in TCR contact and MHC binding are preserved. A substituted MBP peptide analogue that forms long-lived peptide-MHC complexes in vivo is more effective than the unmodified MBP peptide. Lower doses of the substituted peptide analogue are effective, and the effect is longer lasting than treatment with the unmodified peptide. Clinical signs of EAE are reversed by injection of the substituted peptide during the acute phase of disease. Moreover, treatment of mice in the remission phase of EAE results in a dramatically reduced incidence of relapse. In summary, we have shown that EAE can be reversed after onset and treated during remission with an MBP peptide analogue that has been modified for improved therapeutic potency.
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PMID:Reversal of acute experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis and prevention of relapses by treatment with a myelin basic protein peptide analogue modified to form long-lived peptide-MHC complexes. 754 83

The cellular immunology of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, a model for multiple sclerosis, has been studied, for the most part, using T cells directed to dominant epitopes of the Ag myelin basic protein (MBP). To characterize T cells reactive to cryptic epitopes of MBP, we immunized Lewis rats with each of 17 overlapping peptides of the 18.5-kDa isoform of rat MBP. We found that, in addition to the known 71-90 epitope, six other peptides induced active encephalomyelitis in the majority the injected rats. T cell lines raised to six different MBP epitopes were encephalitogenic upon adoptive transfer to naive rats. In contrast to the T cells specific for the dominant 71-90 peptide, the T cell lines reactive to cryptic epitopes were not restricted in their TCR genes to V beta 8.2, and some of the lines caused prolonged disease. Thus, T cells of different specificities and TCR usage can be pathogenic.
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PMID:Pathogenicity of T cells responsive to diverse cryptic epitopes of myelin basic protein in the Lewis rat. 756 Oct 70

Allelic exclusion at the T cell receptor alpha locus TCR-alpha is incomplete, as demonstrated by the presence of a number of T lymphocyte clones carrying two expressed alpha chain products. Such dual alpha chain T cells have been proposed to play a role in autoimmunity, for example, because of a second TCR-alpha beta pair having bypassed negative selection by virtue of low expression. We examined this hypothesis by generating mice of various autoimmunity-prone strains carrying a hemizygous targeted disruption of the TCR-alpha locus, therefore unable to produce dual alpha chain T cells. Normal mice have a low but significant proportion of T cells expressing two cell-surface TCR-alpha chains that could be enumerated by comparison to TCR-alpha hemizygotes, which have none. Susceptibility to various autoimmune diseases was analyzed in TCR-alpha hemizygotes that had been backcrossed to disease-prone strains for several generations. The incidence of experimental allergic encephalomyelitis and of lupus is not affected by the absence of dual TCR-alpha cells. In contrast, nonobese diabetic (NOD) TCR alpha hemizygotes are significantly protected from cyclophosphamide-accelerated insulitis and diabetes. Thus, dual alpha T cells may play an important role in some but not all autoimmune diseases. Furthermore, since protected and susceptible NOD mice both show strong spontaneous responses to glutamic acid decarboxylase, responses to this antigen, if necessary for diabetetogenesis, are not sufficient.
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PMID:Dual T cell receptor alpha chain T cells in autoimmunity. 756 98


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