Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0024141 (systemic lupus erythematosus)
44,322 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Genetic regulation of the spontaneous anti-histone antibody production in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) was studied using the H-2-congenic and T cell receptor beta chain gene complex (TCR beta)-congenic NZB and NZW strains and their crosses. We found that the original, parental H-2d/d NZB mice produced significantly higher titers of serum IgM class anti-histone antibodies than did the congenic H-2d/z or H-2z/z NZB mice. However, none of these three NZB strains produced IgG antibodies. The NZW strain of any H-2 haplotype did not produce IgM and IgG anti-histone antibodies. The IgG anti-histone antibodies were produced only by H-2d/z heterozygous NZB x NZW F1, but not by homozygous H-2z/z or H-2d/d NZB x NZW F1 mice. In studies using (NZB x NZW) F1 x NZB backcross mice, only the progeny having both H-2d/z and NZW-type TCR beta genotypes produced high amounts of IgG antibodies. There was a tight linkage between the NZW-type TCR beta and the production of IgG anti-histone antibodies in TCR beta-congenic NZB x NZW F1 mice. All these findings were in keeping with our preceding observations on the genetic regulation of anti-DNA antibodies in these mice and suggest that certain common mechanisms such as super-antigen-mediated or common idiotope-mediated regulations may underlie the production of these two distinct autoantibodies in NZB x NZW F1 mice.
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PMID:Genetic association between natural autoantibody responses to histones and DNA in murine lupus. 139 98

We have previously demonstrated that the introduction of the bm12 mutation into NZB mice results in animals that spontaneously produce high titer IgG autoantibodies to dsDNA. The observation that NZB.H-2bm12 develop lupus although NZB.H-2b control mice do not, provides a unique system to study the role of Th cells in the production of antibodies to dsDNA. We have isolated, in the absence of a known stimulating autoantigen, a series of seven autoreactive T cell clones that provide help in vitro for the production of IgG anti-dsDNA antibodies by syngeneic B cells. The data on these seven cloned T cell lines was compared to two cloned T cell lines specific for keyhole limpet hemocyanin. The seven cloned T cell lines, coined clones 19D, 23G, 410F, 410H, C1, C15, and C52 all show significant help in vitro for production of IgM and IgG antibodies to ssDNA and dsDNA; antibody levels increased 7- to 30-fold compared to cultures without T cells. Clones C1, C15, and C52 were furthered studied and were shown to provide help for IgM antihistone and anti-OVA responses but provided significantly less help for IgG antibodies. In contrast, keyhole limpet hemocyanin-specific cloned T cell lines TK2 and TK5 provided help for IgM antibodies to ssDNA, dsDNA, and histone, but failed to significantly increase IgG antibodies to ssDNA, dsDNA, or histone. The cloned T cell lines were restricted to H-2bm12 and proliferated only in response to APC from NZB.H-2bm12 and B6.C-H-2bm12 but not NZB.H-2b or NZB.H-2d mice; their in vitro helper activity was inhibited by antibodies to class II. All cloned T cell lines expressed Thy-1, CD5, and TCR-alpha/beta. Three of the seven clones used TCR-V beta 4. However, the V beta expression of the four remaining autoreactive T cell clones could not be determined. All of the autoreactive cloned T cell lines produce significant IL-4 but no detectable IL-2 or IFN-gamma. We believe that HPLC-purified peptides eluted from I-Abm12 molecules from APC can potentially provide insight on the putative autoantigen.
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PMID:Generation and characterization of cloned T helper cell lines for anti-DNA responses in NZB.H-2bm12 mice. 146 Feb 94

In previous work, we found that only 59 (15%) of 396 "autoreactive" T cell clones derived from five patients with lupus nephritis had the ability to selectively augment the production of pathogenic anti-DNA autoantibodies and the majority (49/59) of those autoimmune T helper (Th) clones were CD4+. Surprisingly, 7 of those Th clones were CD4-/CD8- and gamma/delta TCR+, capable of augmenting the production of pathogenic anti-DNA autoantibodies up to 125-fold. The gamma/delta Th clones responded in a MHC-nonrestricted manner to some endogenous autoantigen associated with heat shock proteins (HSP60) on the lupus B cells. The gamma/delta TCR genes expressed by 4 of these Th clones were amplified and sequenced here. Three of the 4 Th clones, each from a different lupus patient, expressed a gene from the V gamma 1 subgroup. Moreover, 2 of the Th clones expressed V delta 5, and the others V delta 1 or V delta 3. These TCRs are rarely expressed by peripheral blood gamma/delta T cells of normal adult humans. The predominant gamma/delta T cells in human peripheral blood express V gamma 2 (V gamma 9) and V delta 2 TCR genes, including HSP-responsive T cells. None of the lupus Th clones expressed this combination of TCR genes. In addition, some of these pathogenic autoantibody-inducing Th clones from the lupus patients had limited diversity and few N-nucleotide additions in their gamma/delta TCR junctional regions (CDR3), thus resembling fetal gamma/delta thymocytes early in ontogeny.
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PMID:Pathogenic autoantibody-inducing gamma/delta T helper cells from patients with lupus nephritis express unusual T cell receptors. 153 88

To determine the relative presence of TCR gamma delta+ and TCR alpha beta+ T cells in synovial tissue from patients with various types of inflammatory synovitis and in tissues from patients with a number of chronic T cell-mediated conditions, we stained frozen tissue sections with monoclonal antibodies in indirect immunofluorescence assays. In tissues obtained from patients with chronic T cell-mediated granulomatous conditions (Wegener's granulomatosis, lymphomatoid granulomatosis, granuloma annulare, Langerhans' cells granulomatosis, pigmented villonodular synovitis, Takayasu's arteritis, and talc granulomatosis), the T cells present were predominantly TCR alpha beta+, without an increased presence of TCR gamma delta+ cells. In contrast, 6 of 14 (43%) synovia from patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) showed increased TCR gamma delta+ T cells (3-10 cells/hpf). The RA synovia with increased TCR gamma delta+ cells present had an increased tissue inflammation score compared to RA synovia with few TCR gamma delta+ cells [18.6 +/- 5.8 versus 11.6 +/- 4.2 (mean +/- SE), P less than 0.05]. In contrast, synovia from patients with osteoarthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, and trauma did not show an increased presence of TCR gamma delta+ T cells. Thus, in cellular inflammatory infiltrates the presence of increased TCR gamma delta cells is not a component of noninfectious granulomatous inflammation but is found in approximately 40% of RA synovia with high levels of inflammation.
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PMID:Increase in TCR gamma delta T lymphocytes in synovia from rheumatoid arthritis patients with active synovitis. 153 4

Experimentally induced murine graft-vs.-host disease may be characterized by hypergammaglobulinemia, autoantibody formation, and immune complex-mediated organ system damage that mimics SLE. These autoimmune phenomena are mediated by abnormal Th-B cell cooperation, across MHC disparities, in which donor-derived allospecific Th cells recognize and interact with MHC class II antigens on the surface of recipient B cells. Microbial toxins, termed superantigens, which bind to MHC class II molecules and activate selected T cells based on TCR variable gene usage, may induce a similar form of Th-B cell interaction. In the present study, we generated and characterized human Th cell lines reactive with the Mycoplasma arthritidis superantigen (MAM). The essential observation is that resting human B cells bind MAM and present it to superantigen-reactive autologous or allogeneic Th cells, resulting in both Th cell activation and a consequent polyclonal Ig response by the superantigen-bearing B cells.
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PMID:Helper T cell-dependent human B cell differentiation mediated by a mycoplasmal superantigen bridge. 214 Oct 59

MRL-lpr/lpr mice develop a severe autoimmune disease that resembles systemic lupus erythematosis in humans. The predominant immunological feature in these mice is the development of peripheral lymphadenopathy due to the expansion of an unusual T cell subset (TCR-alpha/beta +5CD3+4-8-B220+), which may be related to the onset of their autoimmunity. However, it is unknown whether such abnormal lymphocytes proliferate in the specific organs or not. We demonstrated in the present study that the number of liver nonparenchymal mononuclear cells (MNC) in the diseased MRL-lpr/lpr mice was 10 times greater than that of control MRL-+/+ mice. Moreover, the freshly isolated liver MNC of MRL-lpr/lpr mice vigorously proliferated in vitro and consisted of abnormal CD3+4-8- lymphocytes. Such in vitro proliferation was not observed in the MNC of other peripheral lymphoid organs. A potent natural cytotoxicity was also confined to the liver MNC in MRL-lpr/lpr mice. In vivo injection of [3H]TdR demonstrated that liver MNC incorporated [3H]TdR; such incorporation showed a peak on day 1, and the MNC-incorporated [3H]TdR appeared in the lymph nodes as late as day 5 after the injection. These results suggest that the liver is a possible site for the proliferation of abnormal lymphocytes, which may migrate thereafter into the peripheral organs in MRL-lpr/lpr mice.
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PMID:Liver is a possible site for the proliferation of abnormal CD3+4-8- double-negative lymphocytes in autoimmune MRL-lpr/lpr mice. 214 31

There are a number of mechanisms which cooperate to produce and maintain T-cell tolerance. First, and perhaps most important, is the clonal deletion in the thymus of T cells with high affinity for self antigens. However, to ensure that a wide repertoire of T cells is available in the periphery to combat foreign antigens, the threshold of clonal deletion may be set low enough so that T cells whose TCR's have sub-threshold affinity for self antigens mature and migrate to the periphery. T cells which recognize self antigen-derived peptides not expressed or presented in the thymus will also fail to be deleted. For those self-reactive T cells which are not deleted in the thymus, other mechanisms may produce tolerance, including an undefined alteration of signalling pathways which produces clonal anergy, and lowering the avidity of the TCR for its ligand by downregulating coreceptor and accessory molecules. Active suppression of T-cell responses in another well-described phenomenon whose mechanism is undefined. From our observations with the model systems discussed here, we have observed three distinct mechanisms by which T-cell tolerance can be circumvented, allowing autoimmune phenomena to occur. These mechanisms may have relevance for different types of autoimmune diseases seen in humans. In gld mice, the autoimmune disease seems to be related to a global defect in T-cell differentiation and function, which allows for the expansion of autoimmune B cells. While we showed that clonal deletion of V beta-bearing T cells is appropriate in certain cases, aberrant lymphokine secretion by the abnormal T cells or disruption of immune system regulation are most probably responsible for allowing autoantibody production. While human lupus erythematosis shares much of the pathology of lpr and gld mice, there is no expansion of T cells with a similar phenotype in human lupus. There are environmental factors which must play a role in the development of human lupus, since the incidence of the disease does not follow an absolute genetic pattern. The escape from clonal deletion and subsequent reactivation of autoimmune T cells which we observed in V beta 8.1 TCR-transgenic mice can be a model for human autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis and type I diabetes, in which T cells are directed against a specific autoantigen. According to this model, susceptibility loci for autoimmune disease such as the MHC would function by producing different repertoires of T cells which in some cases could gain autoreactivity following activation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Mechanisms of autoimmunity in the context of T-cell tolerance: insights from natural and transgenic animal model systems. 215 Apr 1

It is generally accepted that human Th cells express the surface glycoproteins CD4 and alpha/beta-chain heterodimer of the TCR whereas cytotoxic/suppressor cells are usually CD8+ and alpha/beta TCR+. Another minor set of T cells found in the periphery are CD4-/CD8- (double negative) and express the gamma/delta TCR; these cells can manifest MHC-restricted or nonrestricted cytotoxicity but no helper function. Herein we describe the existence of an unusual Th population in the peripheral blood of humans that are CD4-/CD8- and alpha/beta TCR+. These double-negative Th were markedly expanded in patients with the autoimmune disease SLE and along with CD4+ Th, they induced production of the pathogenic variety of anti-DNA autoantibodies that are IgG in class and cationic in charge. The cationic anti-DNA antibodies induced by the Th were markedly restricted in spectrotype indicating that an oligoclonal population of B cells were committed to produce the pathogenic autoantibodies in active lupus. IL-2-dependent T cell lines were also derived from the patients with active lupus nephritis but the majority of those T cell lines lacked pathogenic autoantibody-inducing capability. Only 4 out of 42 T cell lines from a lupus patient could induce the production of cationic IgG class anti-DNA autoantibodies. The phenotypes of the pathogenic autoantibody-inducing Th lines were similar to the Th subsets: CD4+, alpha/beta TCR+ or CD4-/CD8-, alpha/beta TCR+. These studies suggest that production of pathogenic autoantibodies in human lupus is mediated by mechanisms that are distinct from the generalized, nonspecific polyclonal B cell hyperactivity that leads to excessive production of natural autoantibodies.
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PMID:T cell receptor alpha/beta expressing double-negative (CD4-/CD8-) and CD4+ T helper cells in humans augment the production of pathogenic anti-DNA autoantibodies associated with lupus nephritis. 252 44

Autoimmune MRL-lpr/lpr mice develop an SLE-like disease characterized by a profound lymphadenopathy within an L3T4-, Lyt-2- (DN), B220+ T-cell population. Despite its immature phenotype this subset expresses mature alpha beta TCR belonging predominantly to the V beta 8 gene family and appears to be identical to an activated form of a minor T cell population present in both the thymus and periphery of normal mice. However, the mechanisms underlying the greatly increased cellularity in lpr/lpr-bearing mice are not understood. In this study, the IL-2R expression of lpr/lpr T cells was examined to assess the contribution of IL-2-mediated division to their expansion. The lpr/lpr DN T cells lacked high-affinity IL-2R, even after stimulation, suggesting that IL-2-dependent proliferation plays no role in the expansion of these cells and demonstrating the existence of this unusual T cell phenotype in vivo.
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PMID:IL-2 receptor expression in autoimmune MRL-lpr/lpr mice. The expanded L3T4-, Lyt-2- population does not express p75 and cannot generate functional high-affinity IL-2 receptors. 278 57

Three mAb to variable region determinants of the alpha/beta-chain TCR were used to detect discrete populations of peripheral blood T cells. T cells sharing a TCR determinant defined by such an antibody presumably use the same or similar TCR V or J genes for their alpha- or beta-chains. Thus analysis with these mAb provides a tool to investigate TCR gene usage and expression. Since autoantigen specific T cells may play an important role in initiating autoimmune diseases, TCR were analyzed in different autoimmune diseases and control groups including rheumatoid arthritis, Graves disease, idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura, psoriasis, SLE, insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, and in nonautoimmune control diseases and normals. Purified T cells were stained by indirect immunofluorescence with three mAb to TCR variable regions: mAb S511 stains 1.8 +/- 0.9% (mean +/- 2 SD), mAb C37 stains 3.4 +/- 1.5% and mAb OT145 stains from 0 to 6% of T cells from normal donors. Several individuals were identified with expanded subsets of positive T cells. One patient with adult ITP followed during a 12-mo period consistently had elevated percentages of T cells staining with the mAb OT145 (15.9 to 24.5%). These cells were found to be exclusively CD8+. By Southern blotting DNA prepared from these OT145+, CD8+ cells, but not DNA from the patient's OT145- T cells, revealed a clonal rearrangement using a beta-chain C region probe. Thus this patient had a monoclonal expansion of CD8+, OT145+ cells. Hyperexpression of a TCR variable region, as defined by the available mAb, could not be associated with any of the diseases studied. Examination of T cells at the site of autoimmunity, such as T cells from rheumatoid arthritis synovial fluid, revealed normal percentages of cells staining with these mAb. Immunoperoxidase staining of psoriatic lesional skin showed no striking enrichment of T cells bearing one or the other TCR type.
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PMID:T cell antigen receptors in autoimmunity. 304 97


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