Bone marrow transplantation from mutantlpr/lpr mice. Functional abnormalities rather than alloantigenic differences appear to determine the development of a graft-vs. -host-like syndrome
- 1 September 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in European Journal of Immunology
- Vol. 20 (9) , 2057-2066
- https://doi.org/10.1002/eji.1830200926
Abstract
Transfer of bone marrow (BM) from autoimmunity-prone mice homozygous for the lymphoproliferation (lpr) mutation to irradiated congenic +/+ recipients has previously been shown to result in a syndrome similar to chronic graft-vs.-host (GVH) disease. It has been suggested that this syndrome may be due to an antigenic difference caused by the lpr mutation itself or to antigenic differences at loci closely linked to the lpr locus (Theofilopoulos, A. N. et al., J. Exp. Med. 1985. 162: 1; Mosbach-Ozmen, L. and Loor, F., Thymus 1987. 9: 197). However, the results presented here indicate that alloantigenic differences do not play a role in this syndrome. Instead, the chronic disease observed in lpr/lpr→+/+ BM chimeras appears to develop as a result of a functional defect associated with the lpr mutation which is expressed shortly after transfer of lpr/lpr BM to irradiated recipients. This defect causes an increase in the levels of serum IgG1 and IgG2, which peak at 4–5 weeks post-transfer and then decline to normal levels by 9–10 weeks post-transfer. Inflammation similar to that observed in classic GVH reactions accompanies excess IgG production in congenic +/+ recipients but not in lpr/lpr recipients of lpr/lpr BM. We demonstrate that the GVH-like response occurring in lpr/lpr→+/+ chimeras is dependent on mature T cells, but that either lpr/lpr or +/+ T cells can support this reaction. These results suggest that transfer of lpr/lpr BM to normal mice causes immunoregulatory disturbances which lead to nonspecific activation of T cells. We speculate that lpr/lpr BM causes a GVH-like reaction in +/+ recipients but a systemic lupus erythematosus-like syndrome in lpr/lpr recipients because of intrinsic differences in the +/+ and lpr/lpr host environments. Considering these findings, the lpr/lpr→+/+ GVH model may be useful for analysis of factors capable of inducing undesirable reactions in clinical BM transplantation between nominally histocompatible donors and recipients, in addition to being informative about the nature of the lpr mutation itself.This publication has 57 references indexed in Scilit:
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