Literature DB >> 8738468

A fas antigen receptor mutation allows development of toxic shock syndrome toxin-1-induced lethal shock in V beta 8.2 T-cell receptor transgenic mice.

C M Cullen1, P F Bonventre, H Heeg, H Bluethmann, J D Mountz, C K Edwards.   

Abstract

Recombinant toxic shock syndrome toxin-1 (rTSST-1) administered to MRL-lpr/lpr TCR V beta 8.2 transgenic mice at doses of 0.1 microgram/mouse resulted in 100% mortality. This was an unexpected finding since TSST-1 does not activate V beta 8.2 T cells. In contrast, control mice heterozygous at the lpr locus and also for the transgene (MRL-lpr/+; V beta 8.2/0) survived doses of superantigen 100 times higher. The transgenic mice which succumbed to rTSST-1 challenge exhibited histopathology of the liver consistent with toxic shock (generalized inflammation and hepatocellular necrosis) as well as substantially elevated serum TNF-alpha, IL-2, and IL-6 cytokine levels. Splenic T cells derived from transgenic mice stimulated with rTSST-1 in vitro did not undergo detectable proliferation as measured in a standard mitogen assay. However, PCR amplification of cDNA prepared from the V beta 8.2 splenocytes revealed the presence of minor populations of TSST-1-reactive V beta elements (i.e. V beta 3 and V beta 15). Furthermore, an expansion of the V beta 3 and V beta 15 T-cell families was detected by PCR assay of spleen cell cultures stimulated with rTSST-1. These results suggested that the exquisite sensitivity of the MRL-lpr/lpr V beta 8.2 transgenic animals to rTSST-1 was not dependent exclusively on T-cell proliferation but was augmented by the influence of a defective fas antigen receptor expressed in homozygous lpr mice. To test this hypothesis more directly, we compared the sensitivity of MRL-lpr/lpr mice (not carrying the V beta 8.2 transgene) to MRL-+/+ mice. The MRL-lpr/lpr fas antigen-defective mice were substantially more susceptible to rTSST-1 challenge. Mice carrying the lpr mutation on another genetic background (C57BL/6.C3H-lpr/lpr) were also more sensitive to rTSST-1 challenge than were C57BL/6.C3H-+/+ mice. Although induction of toxic shock is clearly associated with T-cell proliferation, defects in fas antigen receptor or ligand may also contribute substantively to superantigen-mediated lethal shock by still undefined mechanisms.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 8738468     DOI: 10.1159/000163965

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pathobiology        ISSN: 1015-2008            Impact factor:   4.342


  1 in total

1.  Role of Fas and Treg cells in fracture healing as characterized in the fas-deficient (lpr) mouse model of lupus.

Authors:  Maisa O Al-Sebaei; Dana M Daukss; Anna C Belkina; Sanjeev Kakar; Nathan A Wigner; Daniel Cusher; Dana Graves; Thomas Einhorn; Elise Morgan; Louis C Gerstenfeld
Journal:  J Bone Miner Res       Date:  2014-06       Impact factor: 6.741

  1 in total

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