Immune tolerance to autoantibody-derived peptides delays development of autoimmunity in murine lupus.

AUTOR(ES)
RESUMO

Mechanisms that initiate and maintain autoantibody (autoAb) production in individuals with autoimmune diseases like SLE are poorly understood. Inadequate suppression of autoreactive T cells and/or unusual activation of T and B cells may underlie the persistence of pathogenic autoAbs in lupus. Here, we examine the possibility that in mice with lupus, autoAb molecules may be upregulating their own production by activating self-reactive T cells via their own processed peptides; downregulation of this circuit may decrease autoAb production and delay the development of lupus. We found that before the onset of clinical disease, lupus-prone (NZB/NZW) F1 [BWF1] (but not MHC-matched nonautoimmune mice) developed spontaneous T cell autoimmunity to peptides from variable regions of heavy chains (VH) of syngeneic anti-DNA mAbs but not to peptides from the VH region of an mAb to an exogenous antigen. Tolerizing young BWF1 mice with intravenous injections of autoAb-derived determinants substantially delayed development of anti-DNA antibodies and nephritis and prolonged survival. Thus, in such an autoAb-mediated disease, the presence of autoreactive T cells against VH region determinants of autoAbs may represent an important mechanism involved in the regulation of autoimmunity. Our findings show that tolerizing such autoreactive T cells can postpone the development of an autoimmune disease like SLE.

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