Inflammation activates self hsp60‐specific T cells

Abstract
Injection of incomplete Freund's adjuvant (IFA) into the footpads of BALB/c mice induced an acute inflammation. Draining popliteal lymph nodes showed major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II-restricted proliferation when challenged in vitro with recombinant Mycobacterium bovis 65-kDa heat shock protein (hsp65). αβ Tcell receptor-positive, CD4+, hsp65-specific T cell lines and clones were generated from these lymph nodes, and 87% of clones responded to a P galactosidase fusion protein containing residues 238–573 of human hsp60. Seventy percent of these hsp60-responsive clones also responded to a synthetic peptide corresponding to residues 412–423 of the mouse hsp60. This peptide also induced significant responses in IFA-primed lymph node cells but not in lymphoid cells from unimmunized mice. These results demonstrate that T cells specific for epitopes in self hsp60 are activated during inflammatory responses induced in the absence of exogenous bacterial hsp65. The findings of this study may provide a basis for understanding the often reported isolation of mycobacterial hsp65-responsive T cells from inflammatory sites of arthritis patients, and the protective effects of preimmunization with hsp65 in experimental models of arthritis.