B cells are required for lupus nephritis in the polygenic, Fas-intact MRL model of systemic autoimmunity

O Chan, MP Madaio, MJ Shlomchik - The Journal of Immunology, 1999 - journals.aai.org
O Chan, MP Madaio, MJ Shlomchik
The Journal of Immunology, 1999journals.aai.org
B cells are required for both the expression of lupus nephritis and spontaneous T cell
activation/memory cell accumulation in MRL-Fas lpr mice (MRL/lpr). Autoimmunity in the
MRL/lpr strain is the result of Fas-deficiency and multiple background genes; however, the
precise roles of background genes vs Fas-deficiency have not been fully defined. Fas-
deficiency (ie, the lpr defect) is required in B cells for optimal autoantibody expression,
raising the possibility that the central role for B cells in MRL/lpr mice may not extend to …
Abstract
B cells are required for both the expression of lupus nephritis and spontaneous T cell activation/memory cell accumulation in MRL-Fas lpr mice (MRL/lpr). Autoimmunity in the MRL/lpr strain is the result of Fas-deficiency and multiple background genes; however, the precise roles of background genes vs Fas-deficiency have not been fully defined. Fas-deficiency (ie, the lpr defect) is required in B cells for optimal autoantibody expression, raising the possibility that the central role for B cells in MRL/lpr mice may not extend to MRL/+ mice and, thus, to lupus models that do not depend on Fas-deficiency (“polygenic lupus”). To address this issue, B cell-deficient, Fas-intact MRL/+ mice (J H d-MRL/+) were created; and disease was evaluated in aged animals (> 9 mo). The J H d-MRL/+ animals did not develop nephritis or vasculitis at a time when the B cell-intact littermates had severe disease. In addition, while activated/memory CD4+ and CD8+ T cells accumulated in B cell-intact mice, such accumulation was substantially inhibited in the absence of B cells. This effect appeared to be restricted to the MRL strain because it was not seen in B cell-deficient BALB/c mice (J H d-BALB) of similar ages. The results indicate that B cells are essential in promoting systemic autoimmunity in a Fas-independent model. Therefore, B cells have an important role in pathogenesis, generalizable to lupus models that depend on multiple genes even when Fas expression is intact. The results provide further rationale for B cell suppression as therapy for systemic lupus erythematosus.
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