Signalling through CD30 protects against autoimmune diabetes mediated by CD8 T cells
Details
Publication Year 1999-03-25,Volume 398,Issue #6725,Page 341-344
Journal Title
NATURE
Publication Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Autoantigens found on pancreatic islets can move to draining lymph nodes, where they are able to cause the activation and consequent deletion of autoreactive T cells by a mechanism termed cross-tolerance(1,2), This deletion depends on signalling through CD95 (also known as Fas), a member of the superfamily of tumour-necrosis-factor receptors(3). Here we describe a new mechanism that protects against autoimmunity: this mechanism involves another member of this superfamily, CD30, whose function was largely unknown. CD30-deficient islet-specific CD8-positive T cells are roughly 6,000-fold more autoaggressive than wild-type cells, with the transfer of as few as 160 CD30-deficient T cells leading to the complete destruction of pancreatic islets and the rapid onset of diabetes. We show that, in the absence of CD30 signalling, cells activated but not yet deleted by the CD95-dependent cross-tolerance mechanism gain the ability to proliferate extensively upon secondary encounter with antigen on parenchymal tissues, such as the pancreatic islets. Thus, CD30 signalling limits the proliferative potential of autoreactive CD8 effector T cells and protects the body against autoimmunity.
Publisher
MACMILLAN MAGAZINES LTD
Keywords
HODGKINS-DISEASE; ANTIGENS; SELECTION; INDUCTION; DELETION; DEATH; MICE
Publisher's Version
https://doi.org/10.1038/18692
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


Creation Date: 1999-03-25 12:00:00
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