| Literature DB >> 24904590 |
Claudia Rival1, Yulius Setiady2, Eileen T Samy3, Jessica Harakal1, Kenneth S K Tung1.
Abstract
Human maternal autoantibodies can trigger autoimmune diseases such as congenital heart block (CHB) in the progeny of women with lupus or Sjogren's disease. The pathogenic effect of early autoantibody (autoAb) exposure has been investigated in a murine neonatal autoimmune ovarian disease (nAOD) model triggered by a unique ZP3 antibody. Although immune complexes (IC) are formed in adult and neonatal ovaries, ZP3 antibody triggers severe nAOD only in <7-day-old neonatal mice. Propensity to nAOD is due to the uniquely hyper-responsive neonatal natural killer (NK) cells that lack the inhibitory Ly49C/I receptors. In nAOD, the neonatal NK cells directly mediate ovarian inflammation and oocyte depletion while simultaneously promoting de novo pathogenic ovarian-specific T cell responses. Resistance to nAOD in older mice results from the emergence of the Ly49C/I(+) NK cells that regulate effector NK cells and from CD25(+) regulatory T cell control. In preliminary studies, FcγRIII(+) NK cells as well as the ovarian resident FcγRIII(+) macrophages and/or dendritic cells were found to be as indispensable players. Activated by ovarian IC, they migrate to lymphoid organs where NK cell priming occurs. Remarkably, the findings in nAOD are very similar to those reported for neonatal responses to a retrovirus and its cognate antibody that lead to long-lasting immunity. Studies on nAOD therefore provide insights into maternal autoAb-mediated neonatal autoimmunity, including CHB, while simultaneously uncovering new properties of the neonatal innate and adaptive responses, lethality of premature infant infection, and novel neonatal antiviral vaccine design.Entities:
Keywords: Ly49 receptors; NK cells; autoimmune ovarian disease; congenital heart block; immune complex; neonatal immunology; neonatal viral immunity; regulatory T cells
Year: 2014 PMID: 24904590 PMCID: PMC4035566 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2014.00242
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Ovarian immunopathology of TI-nAOD in C57BL/6 Rag1. (A) Ovarian atrophy with major oocyte depletion and disrupted ovarian architecture. (B) Normal ovarian histology in mice injected with ZP3 mAb and NK cell-depleting (NK1.1) mAb. (C–E) Mononuclear cell-dominant (C, arrows), or granulocyte-dominant (E, arrows) infiltrates inside ovarian follicles is a common feature of ovarian pathology in TI-nAOD. The dotted lines (C,E) outline ovarian follicles where oocytes are replaced by inflammatory cells while the asterisks (C–E) indicate normal ovarian follicles. (D), Inflammatory cells also infiltrate the ovarian interstitium (arrows). In (F), Immunofluorescence detection of mouse IgG (green fluorescence represents zona pellucida-bound ZP3 mAb); and NKG2D+ NK cells (red fluorescence) detectable outside and inside the zona pellucida (white arrows). DAPI (nuclear blue staining). Magnification [(A,B): 50×; (C–F): 400×]. Hematolyxin and eosin stain (A–E). [Reproduced from Rival et al. (45), J. Immunol. 191, 2865–2869].
Figure 2Mechanism of nAOD induction. Ovarian ZP3 immune complexes on the zona pellucida (ZP, green) are formed after maternal autoAb transfer and stimulate FcγRIII+ macrophage/dendritic cells that activate (1) a de novo CD4+ T cell response (in red), and (2) Ly49-negative neonatal NK cells (in blue). These NK cells produce IFNγ promoting a Th1 pathogenic CD4+ T cell response to ovarian antigens. Ovarian inflammation and oocyte depletion is, in turn, mediated by the FcγRIII+ neonatal NK cells and activated Th1 effector CD4+ T cells. Mice older than 9 days fail to develop nAOD because of the emergence of Ly49+ NK cells (in purple dotted box) and Treg function (not depicted).