Molecular mimicry between neurons and an intracerebral pathogen induces a CD8 T cell-mediated autoimmune disease

M Sanchez-Ruiz, L Wilden, W Müller… - The Journal of …, 2008 - journals.aai.org
M Sanchez-Ruiz, L Wilden, W Müller, W Stenzel, A Brunn, H Miletic, D Schlüter…
The Journal of Immunology, 2008journals.aai.org
To identify basic mechanisms of how infections may induce a neuron-specific autoimmune
response, we generated mice expressing OVA as neuronal autoantigen under control of the
neuron-specific enolase promoter (NSE-OVA mice). Intracerebral, but not systemic, infection
with attenuated Listeria monocytogenes-secreting OVA induced an atactic-paretic
neurological syndrome in NSE-OVA mice after bacterial clearance from the brain, whereas
wild-type mice remained healthy. Immunization with attenuated Listeria monocytogenes …
Abstract
To identify basic mechanisms of how infections may induce a neuron-specific autoimmune response, we generated mice expressing OVA as neuronal autoantigen under control of the neuron-specific enolase promoter (NSE-OVA mice). Intracerebral, but not systemic, infection with attenuated Listeria monocytogenes-secreting OVA induced an atactic-paretic neurological syndrome in NSE-OVA mice after bacterial clearance from the brain, whereas wild-type mice remained healthy. Immunization with attenuated Listeria monocytogenes-secreting OVA before intracerebral infection strongly increased the number of intracerebral OVA-specific CD8 T cells aggravating neurological disease. T cell depletion and adoptive transfer experiments identified CD8 T cells as decisive mediators of the autoimmune disease. Importantly, NSE-OVA mice having received OVA-specific TCR transgenic CD8 T cells developed an accelerated, more severe, and extended neurological disease. Adoptively transferred pathogenic CD8 T cells specifically homed to OVA-expressing MHC class I+ neurons and, corresponding to the clinical symptoms,∼ 30% of neurons in the anterior horn of the spinal cord became apoptotic. Thus, molecular mimicry between a pathogen and neurons can induce a CD8 T cell-mediated neurological disease, with its severity being influenced by the frequency of specific CD8 T cells, and its induction, but not its symptomatic phase, requiring the intracerebral presence of the pathogen.
journals.aai.org