Abstract

Abstract Approximately 10% of peripheral CD4+ cells and less than 1% of CD8+ cells in normal unimmunized adult mice express the IL-2 receptor α-chain (CD25) molecules. When CD4+ cell suspensions prepared from BALB/c nu/+ mice lymph nodes and spleens were depleted of CD25+ cells by specific mAb and C, and then inoculated into BALB/c athymic nude (nu/nu) mice, all recipients spontaneously developed histologically and serologically evident autoimmune diseases (such as thyroiditis, gastritis, insulitis, sialoadenitis, adrenalitis, oophoritis, glomerulonephritis, and polyarthritis); some mice also developed graft-vs-host-like wasting disease. Reconstitution of CD4+CD25+ cells within a limited period after transfer of CD4+CD25- cells prevented these autoimmune developments in a dose-dependent fashion, whereas the reconstitution several days later, or inoculation of an equivalent dose of CD8+ cells, was far less efficient for the prevention. When nu/nu mice were transplanted with allogeneic skins or immunized with xenogeneic proteins at the time of CD25- cell inoculation, they showed significantly heightened immune responses to the skins or proteins, and reconstitution of CD4+CD25+ cells normalized the responses. Taken together, these results indicate that CD4+CD25+ cells contribute to maintaining self-tolerance by down-regulating immune response to self and non-self Ags in an Ag-nonspecific manner, presumably at the T cell activation stage; elimination/reduction of CD4+CD25+ cells relieves this general suppression, thereby not only enhancing immune responses to non-self Ags, but also eliciting autoimmune responses to certain self-Ags. Abnormality of this T cell-mediated mechanism of peripheral tolerance can be a possible cause of various autoimmune diseases.

Keywords

IL-2 receptorImmunologyImmune systemCD8Immune toleranceBiologyT cell

MeSH Terms

AnimalsAutoimmune DiseasesCD4-Positive T-LymphocytesCD8-Positive T-LymphocytesFemaleGraft vs Host DiseaseImmunotherapyAdoptiveInterleukin-2IsoantigensLymphocyte DepletionMiceMiceInbred BALB CMiceNudeReceptorsInterleukin-2Self ToleranceSkin TransplantationT-Lymphocyte Subsets

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Publication Info

Year
1995
Type
article
Volume
155
Issue
3
Pages
1151-1164
Citations
5371
Access
Closed

Citation Metrics

5371
OpenAlex
228
Influential
4918
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Cite This

Shimon Sakaguchi, N Sakaguchi, M Asano et al. (1995). Immunologic self-tolerance maintained by activated T cells expressing IL-2 receptor α-chains (CD25). Breakdown of a single mechanism of self-tolerance causes various autoimmune diseases. The Journal of Immunology , 155 (3) , 1151-1164. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.155.3.1151

Identifiers

DOI
10.4049/jimmunol.155.3.1151
PMID
7636184

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%