Ontogeny of T cell tolerance to peripherally expressed antigens
Details
Publication Year 1999-03-30,Volume 96,Issue #7,Page 3854-3858
Journal Title
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Publication Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Transgenic expression of the influenza virus hemagglutinin (IIA) in the pancreatic islet beta cells of InsHA mice leads to peripheral tolerance of HA-specific T cells. To examine the onset of tolerance, InsHA mice were immunized with influenza virus A/PR/8 at different ages, and the presence of nontolerant T cells was determined by the induction of autoimmune diabetes, The data revealed a neonatal period wherein T cells were not tolerant and influenza virus infection led to HA-specific beta cell destruction and autoimmune diabetes, The ability to induce autoimmunity gradually waned, such that adult mice were profoundly tolerant to viral HA and were protected from diabetes. Because cross presentation of islet antigens by professional antigen-presenting cells had been reported to induce peripheral tolerance, the temporal relationship between tolerance induction and activation of HA-specific T cells in the lymph nodes draining the pancreas was examined, In tolerant adult mice, but not in 1-week-old neonates, activation and proliferation of HA-specific CD8(+) T cells occurred in the pancreatic lymph nodes. Thus, lack of tolerance in the perinatal period correlated with lack of activation of antigen-specific CD8(+) T cells. This work provides evidence for the developmental regulation of peripheral tolerance induction.
Publisher
NATL ACAD SCIENCES
Keywords
PRESENTING CELLS; CLONAL ELIMINATION; NEONATAL MICE; IN-VIVO; SELF; INDUCTION; ACTIVATION; RESPONSES; DELETION; IMMUNITY
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Creation Date: 1999-03-30 12:00:00
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