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Original Article

Autoimmune Syndrome After Neonatal Induction of Tolerance to Alloantigens: Analysis of the Specificity and of the Cellular and Genetic Origin of Autoantibodies

, , , , , , , & show all
Pages 283-291 | Received 19 Nov 1990, Accepted 17 Jan 1991, Published online: 07 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

BALB/c mice neonatally injected with 108 semiallogenic (C57BL/6×BALB/c)FI spleen cells become tolerant to the H-2b alloantigens, but also develop a wide range of autoimmune manifestations characteristic of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Indeed, in these mice, the presence of a hypergammaglobulinaemia, auto-antibodies - including anti-ssDNA, anti-platelet, thymocytotoxic and rheumatoid factor antibodies - circulating immune complexes, cryoglobulins as well as renal glomerular deposition of immunoglobulins have been observed. In this study, we have shown that the allogenic effect and B cell chimaerism which characterize these F1 cell-injected mice is associated with the expression of a large spectrum of autoantibodies, including anti-ssDNA and anti-cytoskeleton antibodies, and that these autoantibodies are not multispecific. We took advantage of the fact that, in this model, autoantibodies are exclusively produced by F1 donor B cells to inject newborn BALBlc mice with FI Xid spleen cells lacking the CD5+B cell subset. Injection of 2×108 FI Xid spleen cells triggers the production of anti-ssDNA as well as anti-BrMRBC antibodies, and these mice developed tissue lesions. Finally, analysis of the VH gene family expressed by monoclonal autoantibodies derived from F1 cell-injected mice showed that they used the 2 largest families J558 and 7183. These results suggest that the allogenic effect and B cell chimerism which characterize the neonatal induction of tolerance to MHC alloantigens is associated with the selective triggering of autoreactive B cells producing monospecific IgG autoantibodies. They also imply that upon stimulation by persisting alloreactive CD4+ T cells, either CD5- B cells are able to produce autoantibodies or autoantibody-producing CD5+ B cells can differentiate from xid spleen cells.

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