Abstract

Neonatal thymectomy (NTx), especially around day 3 after birth, causes various organ-specific autoimmune diseases in mice. This report shows that: (a) T cells expressing the interleukin 2 receptor alpha chains (CD25) ontogenically begin to appear in the normal periphery immediately after day 3, rapidly increasing within 2 wk to nearly adult levels (approximately 10% of CD3+ cells, especially of CD4+ cells); (b) NTx on day 3 eliminates CD25+ T cells from the periphery for several days; inoculation immediately after NTx of CD25+ splenic T cells from syngeneic non-Tx adult mice prevents autoimmune development, whereas inoculation of CD25- T cells even at a larger dose does not; and furthermore, (c) similar autoimmune diseases can be produced in adult athymic nu/nu mice by inoculating either spleen cell suspensions from 3-d-old euthymic nu/+ mice or CD25+ cell-depleted spleen cell suspensions from older, even 1-yr-old, nu/+ mice. The CD25- populations from neonates or adults are also similar in the profile of cytokine formation. These results, taken together, indicate that one aspect of peripheral self-tolerance is maintained by CD25+ T cells that sustain potentially pathogenic self-reactive T cells in a CD25- dormant state; the thymic production of the former is developmentally programmed to begin on day 3 after birth in mice. Thus, NTx on day 3 can, at least transiently, eliminate/reduce the autoimmune-preventive CD25+ T cells, thereby leading to activation of the self-reactive T cells that have been produced before NTx.

Keywords

IL-2 receptorSpleenImmunologyT cellThymectomyBiologyInterleukin 2CytokineEndocrinologyInternal medicineMedicineImmune systemMyasthenia gravis

MeSH Terms

Age FactorsAnimalsAutoantigensAutoimmune DiseasesBase SequenceClonal DeletionDNA PrimersFemaleHematopoiesisImmune ToleranceImmunizationPassiveMaleMiceMiceInbred BALB CMiceNudeMolecular Sequence DataReceptorsInterleukin-2T-Lymphocyte SubsetsThymectomyThymus Gland

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Blockade of Interleukin-6 Signaling Suppresses Not Only Th17 but Also Interphotoreceptor Retinoid Binding Protein–Specific Th1 by Promoting Regulatory T Cells in Experimental Autoimmune Uveoretinitis

PURPOSE. Both Th17 and Th1 cells contribute to experimental autoimmune uveoretinitis (EAU). Interleukin-6 (IL-6) blockade inhibits Th17 differentiation in EAU and potently suppr...

2011 Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual ... 73 citations

Publication Info

Year
1996
Type
article
Volume
184
Issue
2
Pages
387-396
Citations
1301
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

1301
OpenAlex
38
Influential
1000
CrossRef

Cite This

M Asano, Masaaki Toda, N Sakaguchi et al. (1996). Autoimmune disease as a consequence of developmental abnormality of a T cell subpopulation.. The Journal of Experimental Medicine , 184 (2) , 387-396. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.184.2.387

Identifiers

DOI
10.1084/jem.184.2.387
PMID
8760792
PMCID
PMC2192701

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%