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Original Article |
jbluest{at}diabetes.ucsf.edu
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Key Words: autoimmunity peripheral neuropathy B7-2 costimulation animal model NOD mice
Histology and Immunohistochemistry.
Fluorescence Immunohistochemistry.
Electrophysiological Studies.
Adoptive Transfer.
Flow Cytometry Analysis.
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Introduction
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Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Engagement of the T cell receptor alone is insufficient to cause conventional activation of T cells and differentiation into effector cells. Rather, costimulatory signals are required generally to promote the expansion of antigen-reactive populations of T cells, migration of cells to sites of inflammation, and the production of soluble mediators of inflammation 1234. One of the prominent costimulatory molecules, CD28, interacts with B7-1 (CD80) and B7-2 (CD86) on antigen-presenting cells 4. Drugs that block this critical costimulatory pathway have been shown to inhibit both the development and progression of many autoimmune diseases 5678910. Cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen (CTLA)4-Ig, a soluble antagonist of the CD28/B7 pathway, completely inhibits the development of experimental autoimmune encephalitis and the onset of collagen-induced arthritis as well as other autoimmune diseases 8910. B7-1 and B7-2 molecules have been shown to play distinct roles in several murine models of autoimmune diseases, including type I diabetes and experimental autoimmune encephalitis 67. We have previously reported that blockade of B7-1 in the spontaneous autoimmune NOD mouse strain induced diabetes with faster and higher incidence than untreated NOD animals 7. In contrast, in this study we show that blockade of B7-2 prevented diabetes; however, autoimmunity is redirected from the pancreas to the peripheral nerves, leading to the development of a CD4+ T cell–mediated spontaneous autoimmune peripheral neuropathy in these mice.
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Materials and Methods
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Mice.
B7-2 knockout (KO) mice 11 were backcrossed to NOD mice for nine generations and then intercrossed to generate KO mice. The genotypes were determined by PCR using B7-2–specific primers (sense: TAT-TTC-AAT-GGG-ACT-GCA-TAT-C, antisense: CGA-TCA-CTG-ACA-GTT-CTG-TTA). NOD mice were purchased from Taconic and then bred in the animal care facilities at The University of Chicago or UCSF. Experiments were complied with the standards set out in the guidelines of The University of Chicago and UCSF.
Hematoxylin and eosin staining was performed on 5-µm sections of formalin-fixed tissues. Toluidine blue stained 1-µm sections were prepared from formalin fixed, glutaraldehyde postfixed nerve segments after plastic embedding. Immunohistochemistry was performed using the avidin-biotin method 12. Tissues were snap frozen in OCT and 5-µm cryostat sections were incubated with: rat mAbs to CD3 (L363–29B), CD4 (GK1.5), CD8 (3.155); hamster mAbs to dendritic cells (N418); or species- and isotype-specific nonreactive control mAbs overnight at 4°C. Room temperature incubation with biotinylated rabbit anti–rat or goat anti–hamster secondary Ab (Vector Laboratories) for 30 min was followed by a 1-h incubation with streptavidin-biotin complex (Vector Laboratories). Diaminobenzidine was used as the chromogen. Tease preparations of peripheral nerve were performed using published methods 13.
Slides were stained using Tyramide Signal Amplification (TSA) Direct Kit (NEN Life Science Products) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Sections from each group were thawed, air-dried, fixed in acetone at room temperature, and rehydrated in 1x PBS. Nonspecific staining was blocked using anti-CD16/CD32, (Fc
III/II receptor, 2.4G2; BD PharMingen), and an avidin/biotin blocking kit (Vector Laboratories) in addition to the blocking reagent provided by the TSA kit. Slides were stained with the following biotin-conjugated Abs: anti-CD4 (H129.19) and anti-CD80 (16–10A1) (BD PharMingen). Sections were counterstained with 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI; Sigma-Aldrich) and then coverslipped with Vectashield mounting medium (Vector Laboratories). Slides were examined by epifluorescence using a chroma triple-band filter (Chroma Technology Corporation). Four serial sections from each sample per group were analyzed at 100x and 400x.
Studies were performed on sciatic nerves on mice anesthetized with Nembutal (80 mg/kg). Recording needle electrodes were placed subcutaneously in the footpad. The sciatic nerve was stimulated distally at the ankle and proximally at the sciatic notch by a 0.1-ms rectangular pulse using a pair of monopolar needle electrodes. Recordings were obtained on a TECA Neurostar electromyograph (TECA Corp.) with a filter setting of 2 Hz to 10 kHz. The distal or proximal latencies corresponding to the time laps between the distal or proximal stimulations and the beginning of the first compound muscle action potential were measured. Conduction velocities were calculated by dividing the distance between distal and proximal stimulation sites with the difference between the distal and proximal latencies. The peak-to-peak amplitude of compound muscle action potentials was measured. The comparison of this amplitude between normal and neuropathic mice was used to determine partial conduction block.
CD4+ T cells (positive fraction) and CD4+ T cell–depleted cells (flow through) were separated on a VS+ column (Miltenyi Biotec) after staining with anti–CD4-biotin (GK1.5) and streptavidin microbeads (Miltenyi Biotec). Total cells or purified cells were stimulated with 1 µg/ml of anti-CD3 (145–2C11) and anti-CD28 (PV-1) for 48 h. IL-2 (20 U/ml) was added to the culture of the CD4+ T cell–depleted cells. 8–15 x 106 total cells and CD4+ T cell–depleted cells (<0.3% CD4+ T cells) and 4–6 x 106 CD4+ T cells (
92% pure) were injected intravenously into 4–8-wk-old NOD.SCID mice.
Spleens and sciatic nerves were cut into small fragments and incubated in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 1.6 mg/ml collagenase (type IV; Sigma-Aldrich) and 200 µg/ml DNase I (Boehringer) at 37°C for 30 min. Cells were dissociated by repeated pipetting, reincubated at 37°C for 10 min, washed with PBS 3% serum, and resuspended in staining buffer (PBS, 3% serum, 0.02% azide). Cells were double stained with FITC-conjugated CD11b (M1/70) and PE-conjugated CD45 and biotin-conjugated CD11c (N418) mAbs followed by streptavidin-allophycocyanin staining and analyzed on a FACSCaliburTM (Becton Dickinson).
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Results
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
This study was designed to explore the role of costimulation in the spontaneous autoimmune-prone NOD mouse strain, a prototypic murine model of type 1 Diabetes Mellitus 14. In these mice, insulitis first appears between 2–4 wk of age, and diabetes is detected beginning at 15 wk of age. Diabetes develops in >70% of female mice but occurs in only 30% of male mice. Elimination of B7-2 expression by breeding NOD mice onto the B7-2–deficient background 11 prevented the development of hyperglycemia in virtually 100% of both the female (Fig. 1 a) and male (data not shown) animals. Similar results were observed after anti–B7-2 Ab therapy (4; Fig. 1 c). However, beginning at 20 wk of age, the B7-2 KO NOD mice began to exhibit a symmetrical mild hind leg paralysis, slowly progressing to a generalized limb paralysis such that by 32 wk of age, 100% of female and 30% of the male B7-2 KO mice had succumbed to the disease (Fig. 1 b). The majority of affected animals exhibited full hind leg paralysis, moderate fore leg paralysis, and could only walk with difficulty (Fig. 1 b, inset). There was no evidence of central nervous system (CNS) disorders. The disease was never observed in B7-2 KO mice bred to the C57BL/6 or 129/Sv nonautoimmune mouse background (unpublished data). However, a similar paralytic disease was noted in one third of NOD mice treated with anti–B7-2 mAb but not in PBS-treated mice (Fig. 1 d) or NOD mice treated with isotypic control Abs (data not shown). These results support the important regulatory role of B7-2 in the development of this disease as two independent approaches, genetic modification of B7-2 in NOD mice and anti–B7-2 mAb treatment of wild-type (WT) NOD mice resulted in the same disease. Interestingly, the subset of NOD mice that became diabetic after the anti–B7-2 mAb therapy did not develop the peripheral neuropathy while none of the mice exhibiting the neuropathy became diabetic. The data suggest that elimination of the CD28/B7-2 interactions polarized the autoimmune disorder in the NOD mice from the previously described autoimmune diabetes to a spontaneous autoimmune peripheral polyneuropathy (SAPP).
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Importantly, the regulatory role of B7-2 in protection from cryptic SAPP development was demonstrated in two independent models: in genetically modified B7-2 KO mice and in WT animals treated with blocking anti–B7-2 mAb. The lower incidence of neuropathy in the latter model is likely due to incomplete penetrance of the Ab into relevant tissues and the limited time of treatment. In addition, the induction of neuropathy after B7-2 disruption did not simply result from the prevention of diabetes. Indeed, more than 150 treatments preventing diabetes have been reported. None of them has been described to induce peripheral neuropathy.
Another significant finding in our study was the polarization of the autoimmune response in the B7-2 KO NOD mice, which develop SAPP but are free from the development of diabetes, pointing to the importance of immune dysregulation in the shift from one autoimmune disease to another. The lack of diabetes in these mice did not seem to be due to a lack of islet-reactive diabetogenic T cells. Indeed, in preliminary results we have observed that splenocytes from B7-2 KO mice could induce diabetes when transferred into NOD.SCID mice (data not shown). However, this required the depletion from the innoculum of the CD4+CD25+ T cells, which regulate autoimmune diabetes 25.
The development of SAPP in B7-2 KO NOD mice was unexpected. A recent study showed the presence of myelin-reactive T cells in the spleen of WT NOD mice 24. Such auto-reactive T cells, upon migration in peripheral nerves, could play a role in SAPP. In addition to T cells, peripheral nerves of neuropathic B7-2 KO mice were infiltrated with high number of myeloid cells identified by expression of CD11c and/or CD11b, most of them being myeloid type dendritic cells (data not shown). The high levels of B7-1 expression on these professional antigen-presenting cells likely amplified the activation of myelin-reactive T cells, leading to destruction of myelin sheets and development of SAPP. Whether B7-1 upregulation played a role in initiating and sustaining the destructive inflammatory infiltrate or conversely was a result of the local inflammatory milieu is currently under investigation. However, the striking overexpression of B7-1 in B7-2KO mice compared with NOD mice suggests that B7-1 played an active role in the development of SAPP in B7-2 KO mice. In this regard, it is interesting to note that B7-1 was selectively upregulated in nervous tissue of mice with experimental allergic encephalomyelitis 26. In this murine model, blockade of B7-1 using Fab fragments of anti–B7-1 mAbs reduced IFN-
production and prevented disease whereas blockade with anti–B7-2 exacerbated disease 615. Interestingly, treatment with intact anti–B7-1 mAbs exacerbated the pathology for unknown reasons 27. Similarly, treatment of B7-2 KO NOD mice with this reagent resulted in a rapid and profound induction of diabetes and neuropathy (data not shown). Thus, future experiments will focus on the use of Fab fragments of anti–B7-1 mAbs to avoid potential complications of an "activating" form of the blocking reagent. Finally, the absence of B7-1 expression in the nerves before infiltration and the restriction of B7-1 expression to hematopoietic cells later in the course of the disease does not rule out a major role for resident nerve cells such as Schwann cells in the development of the inflammation in the nerves. However, it is unlikely that the nerve cells directly stimulate (costimulate) the immune response to initiate disease in these animals. Rather, the upregulation of B7-1 in the spleen of B7-2 KO NOD mice could increase the activation of myelin reactive T cells, identified in WT NOD mice 24, which then migrated into the peripheral nerves.
The shift from one autoimmune disease to another is reminiscent of multiple studies in mice and humans that showed concomitant disappearance of one autoimmune syndrome and worsening of a second. NOD mice treated with complete Freund's adjuvant are protected from diabetes but at the same time they can develop lupus 23. Multiple sclerosis patients treated with anti-CD52 Ab showed improvement of their neurologic disease but fully one third of them developed Graves' disease (unpublished data). These results suggest that autoimmune-prone individuals have immune dysfunctions that can manifest as distinct disease entities perhaps dependent upon the costimulatory milieu. For instance, differential expression and ligation of B7-2 and B7-1 at distinct anatomical sites may lead to different outcomes.
Importantly, SAPP has many similarities to human autoimmune demyelinating neuropathies such as chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP) and Guillain-Barré syndrome, although the slow progressive course in SAPP suggests that the immune mechanisms are more similar to those of CIDP 28. This new autoimmune model could help understand the pathophysiology of some autoimmune diseases of the nervous system such as CIDP. The essential role of CD4+ T cell in the effector phase of SAPP could indicate a critical role of these cells in CIDP.
SAPP adds to the very short list of models of spontaneous autoimmune disease mouse models including diabetes, lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, and colitis. In these models, self-tolerance breakdown probably results from chronic stimulation of autoreactive lymphocytes. The pathophysiology of these diseases could be fundamentally different to that observed in experimental autoimmune models in which self-tolerance breakdown is rapid and results from strong immunization with a specific autoantigen. In this regard, CD28 ligation blockade reduced severity or prevented various experimental autoimmune diseases whereas it exacerbated spontaneous autoimmune diabetes 89102529. Similarly, B7-2 ligation blockade promotes SAPP in NOD mice. Although these findings raise concerns about the use of costimulatory blockade in the patient setting, they provide a model for analyzing the genetic and immunological basis for autoimmunity that may lead to new insights into these complex disorders.
| Acknowledgments |
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This research was supported by a National Institutes of Health grant no. P01 DK49799. B. Salomon was supported by a Juvenile Diabetes Foundation fellowship no. 16245-01-01. H. Bour-Jordan was supported by a Juvenile Diabetes Foundation Fellowship no. 3-1999-132.
Submitted: 2 October 2000
Revised: 29 May 2001
Accepted: 26 July 2001
B. Salomon's present address is Laboratoire de Biologie et Thérapeutique des Pathologies Immunitaires, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique ESA 7087, CERVI, Hôpital de la Pitié-Salpêtrière, Paris 75013, France.
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