| Literature DB >> 19864599 |
Anna-Marie Fairhurst1, Chun Xie, Yuyang Fu, Andrew Wang, Christopher Boudreaux, Xin J Zhou, Ricardo Cibotti, Anthony Coyle, John E Connolly, Edward K Wakeland, Chandra Mohan.
Abstract
Increased Type I IFNs or IFN-I have been associated with human systemic lupus erythematosus. Interestingly augmenting or negating IFN-I activity in murine lupus not only modulates systemic autoimmunity, but also impacts lupus nephritis, suggesting that IFN-I may be acting at the level of the end-organ. We find resident renal cells to be a dominant source of IFN-I in an experimental model of autoantibody-induced nephritis. In this model, augmenting IFN-I amplified antibody-triggered nephritis, whereas ablating IFN-I activity ameliorated disease. One mechanism through which increased IFN-I drives immune-mediated nephritis might be operative through increased recruitment of inflammatory monocytes and neutrophils, though this hypothesis needs further validation. Collectively, these studies indicate that an important contribution of IFN-I toward the disease pathology seen in systemic autoimmunity may be exercised at the level of the end-organ.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19864599 PMCID: PMC2876821 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.0900742
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422