Testing time-, ignorance-, and danger-based models of tolerance

CC Anderson, JM Carroll, S Gallucci… - The Journal of …, 2001 - journals.aai.org
CC Anderson, JM Carroll, S Gallucci, JP Ridge, AW Cheever, P Matzinger
The Journal of Immunology, 2001journals.aai.org
In this study, we present data showing that tolerance to Ags in the periphery is not
determined by the time at which the Ag appears, or by special properties of tissues in
newborn mice or newly developing immune systems. We placed male grafts onto
immunoincompetent female mice, allowed the grafts to heal for up to 5 mo, and then
repopulated the recipients with fetal liver stem cells. We found that the newly arising T cells
were neither tolerant nor ignorant of the grafts, but promptly rejected them, though they did …
Abstract
In this study, we present data showing that tolerance to Ags in the periphery is not determined by the time at which the Ag appears, or by special properties of tissues in newborn mice or newly developing immune systems. We placed male grafts onto immunoincompetent female mice, allowed the grafts to heal for up to 5 mo, and then repopulated the recipients with fetal liver stem cells. We found that the newly arising T cells were neither tolerant nor ignorant of the grafts, but promptly rejected them, though they did not reject female grafts, nor show any signs of autoimmunity. We also found that the HY Ag was continuously cross-presented on host APCs, that this presentation was immunogenic, not tolerogenic, and that it depended on the continuous presence of the graft. In searching for the stimulus that might activate the host APCs, we analyzed mRNA expression with a highly sensitive real-time quantitative PCR assay. By using two different “housekeeping” molecules for comparison, we analyzed the message levels for several stress and/or inflammatory molecules in the healed grafts. We found that the long-healed grafts were not equivalent to “normal” skin because the healed grafts expressed lower levels of GAPDH. Altogether, these data suggest that acceptance vs rejection of peripheral tissues is not attributable to ignorance, timing-based tolerance, or special circulation properties of naive T cells in neonatal tissues. It is more likely attributable to an aspect of the context of Ag presentation that remains to be identified.
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