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Development of Autoimmunity against Transcriptionally Unrepressed Target Antigen in the Thymus of Aire-Deficient Mice
Author(s) -
Noriyuki Kuroda,
Tasuku Mitani,
Naoki Takeda,
Naozumi Ishimaru,
Rieko Arakaki,
Yoshio Hayashi,
Yoshiyuki Bando,
Keisuke Izumi,
Takeshi Takahashi,
Takashi Nomura,
Shimon Sakaguchi,
Tomoo Ueno,
Yousuke Takahama,
Daisuke Uchida,
Shijie Sun,
Fumiko Kajiura,
Yasuhiro Mouri,
Hongwei Han,
Akemi Matsushima,
Gen Yamada,
Mitsuru Matsumoto
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.174.4.1862
Subject(s) - autoimmune regulator , autoimmunity , central tolerance , biology , immunology , autoimmune disease , immune tolerance , gene , transcription factor , microbiology and biotechnology , antigen , immune system , genetics , antibody
Autoimmune regulator (AIRE) gene mutation is responsible for the development of organ-specific autoimmune disease with monogenic autosomal recessive inheritance. Although Aire has been considered to regulate the elimination of autoreactive T cells through transcriptional control of tissue-specific Ags in thymic epithelial cells, other mechanisms of AIRE-dependent tolerance remain to be investigated. We have established Aire-deficient mice and examined the mechanisms underlying the breakdown of self-tolerance. The production and/or function of immunoregulatory T cells were retained in the Aire-deficient mice. The mice developed Sjogren's syndrome-like pathologic changes in the exocrine organs, and this was associated with autoimmunity against a ubiquitous protein, alpha-fodrin. Remarkably, transcriptional expression of alpha-fodrin was retained in the Aire-deficient thymus. These results suggest that Aire regulates the survival of autoreactive T cells beyond transcriptional control of self-protein expression in the thymus, at least against this ubiquitous protein. Rather, Aire may regulate the processing and/or presentation of self-proteins so that the maturing T cells can recognize the self-Ags in a form capable of efficiently triggering autoreactive T cells. With the use of inbred Aire-deficient mouse strains, we also demonstrate the presence of some additional factor(s) that determine the target-organ specificity of the autoimmune disease caused by Aire deficiency.

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