Affiliation:
1. Department of Medicine, University of Missouri, Columbia 65212.
Abstract
Abstract
Experimental autoimmune thyroiditis (EAT) can be induced in mice after the transfer of mouse thyroglobulin (MTg)-sensitized donor spleen cells that have been activated in vitro with MTg. CD4+ T cells are required for the transfer of EAT in this model. Because CD4+ T cells produce various lymphokines, such as IFN-gamma, that may be involved in the activation or regulation of the immune response to MTg and the development of EAT, the present study was undertaken to determine whether a neutralizing mAb to IFN-gamma could modulate the induction or expression of EAT. The anti-IFN-gamma mAb XMG-1.2 had no effect on sensitization of donor cells. However, addition of XMG-1.2 mAb during in vitro activation of MTg-primed spleen cells resulted in more severe EAT in recipient mice. The thyroid lesions in recipients of cells cultured with MTg and XMG-1.2 mAb also exhibited granulomatous changes, which differed qualitatively from the predominantly lymphocytic cell infiltrates in recipients of cells cultured with MTg alone. Recipients of MTg-activated spleen cells also developed severe granulomatous EAT when they were given injections of XMG-1.2 mAb. The effects of XMG-1.2 could be neutralized by IFN-gamma. Recipients of cells cultured in the presence of XMG-1.2 mAb had augmented autoantibody responses, although there were no apparent differences in the IgG subclass distribution of the anti-MTg autoantibody responses. These studies suggest that neutralization of endogenous IFN-gamma results in increased activity of cells capable of inducing granulomatous EAT in mice.
Publisher
The American Association of Immunologists
Subject
Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
Cited by
3 articles.
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