| Literature DB >> 10688206 |
R Glynne1, S Akkaraju, J I Healy, J Rayner, C C Goodnow, D H Mack.
Abstract
Therapy for transplant rejection, autoimmune disease and allergy must target mature lymphocytes that have escaped censoring during their development. FK506 and cyclosporin are immunosuppressants which block three antigen-receptor signalling pathways (NFAT, NFkappaB and JNK), through inhibition of calcineurin, and inhibit mature lymphocyte proliferation to antigen. Neither drug induces long-lived tolerance in vivo, however, necessitating chronic use with adverse side effects. Physiological mechanisms of peripheral tolerance to self-antigens provide an opportunity to emulate these processes pharmacologically. Here we use gene-expression arrays to provide a molecular explanation for the loss of mitogenic response in peripheral B-cell anergy, one aspect of immunological tolerance. Self-antigen induces a set of genes that includes negative regulators of signalling and transcription but not genes that promote proliferation. FK506 interferes with calcium-dependent components of the tolerance response and blocks an unexpectedly small fraction of the activation response. Many genes that were not previously connected to self-tolerance are revealed, and our findings provide a molecular fingerprint for the development of improved immunosuppressants that prevent lymphocyte activation without blocking peripheral tolerance.Entities:
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Year: 2000 PMID: 10688206 DOI: 10.1038/35001102
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962