Affiliation:
1. Department of Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, CT 06030
Abstract
AbstractCyclosporin A (CSA)-induced autologous graft-vs-host disease (autoGVHD) is an autoimmune syndrome initiated by autoeffector T cells presumed to be exported from the thymus during CSA treatment. The appearance of noncytotoxic immunoregulatory T cell activity after cessation of CSA treatment is also thymus dependent. In the present study, we have tested the hypothesis that both autoeffector and immunoregulatory T cells in CSA-treated rats are recent thymic emigrants (RTEs). Local syngeneic graft-vs-host reaction (synGVHR) and timed thymectomy (Tx) assays revealed that autoeffector T cells appear initially in the thymus and are promptly exported to lymph nodes (LN) during the first week of CSA treatment. In contrast, immunoregulatory thymocytes are first detectable by local synGVHR inhibition assays during the second week of CSA treatment but are not exported to LN until ∼4 days post-CSA. Both the autoeffector and immunoregulatory T cells in LN express Thy-1, a selective marker for RTEs in the rat. However, the autoeffector RTEs have a CD4+8+ phenotype, whereas the immunoregulatory RTEs have a CD4+8− phenotype. Thus, the coordinate formation in and release from the thymus cortex and medulla of autoeffector and immunoregulatory T cells in CSA-treated rats directly demonstrates that centrally induced, nondeletional tolerance can serve as a fail-safe mechanism by which clones of autoeffector T cells that have escaped intrathymic negative selection for self-MHC class II Ag can be suppressed postthymically.
Publisher
The American Association of Immunologists
Subject
Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
Cited by
2 articles.
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