Abrogation of CD30 and OX40 signals prevents autoimmune disease in FoxP3-deficient mice

Author:

M.Gaspal Fabrina1,Withers David1,Saini Manoj1,Bekiaris Vasileios1,McConnell Fiona M.1,White Andrea1,Khan Mahmood1,Yagita Hideo2,Walker Lucy S.K.1,Anderson Graham1,Lane Peter J.L.1

Affiliation:

1. MRC Centre for Immune Regulation, Institute for Biomedical Research, Birmingham Medical School, Birmingham B15 2TT, England, UK

2. Department of Immunology, Juntendo University School of Medicine, Tokyo 113-8421, Japan

Abstract

Our previous studies have implicated signaling through the tumor necrosis family receptors OX40 and CD30 as critical for maintaining CD4 memory responses. We show that signals through both molecules are also required for CD4 effector-mediated autoimmune tissue damage. Under normal circumstances, male mice deficient in the forkhead transcription factor FoxP3, which lack regulatory CD4 T cells, develop lethal autoimmune disease in the first few weeks of life. However, in the combined absence of OX40 and CD30, FoxP3-deficient mice develop normally and breed successfully. The extensive tissue infiltration and organ destruction characteristic of FoxP3 disease does not appear in these mice, and their mortality is not associated with autoimmunity. Although the absence of OX40 plays the dominant role, FoxP3-deficient mice sufficient in CD30 but deficient in OX40 signals still eventually develop lethal disease. This result was supported by the observation that blocking antibodies to OX40 and CD30 ligands also abrogated disease mediated by FoxP3-deficient T cells. These observations identify OX40 and CD30 signals as essential for the development of clinically relevant CD4-dependent autoimmunity and suggest that combination therapies that abrogate these signals might be used to treat established human autoimmune diseases.

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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