Title of article :
Donor CD8 T cell activation is critical for greater renal disease severity in female chronic graft-vs.-host mice and is associated with increased splenic ICOShi host CD4 T cells and IL-21 expression
Author/Authors :
Foster، نويسنده , , Anthony D. and Haas، نويسنده , , Mark and Puliaeva، نويسنده , , Irina and Soloviova، نويسنده , , Kateryna and Puliaev، نويسنده , , Roman and Via، نويسنده , , Charles S.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages :
13
From page :
61
To page :
73
Abstract :
Lupus-like renal disease in DBA/2-into-F1 (DBA → F1) mice is driven by donor CD4 T cells and is more severe in females. Donor CD8 T cells have no known role. As expected, we observed that females receiving unfractionated DBA splenocytes (CD8 intact → F1) exhibited greater clinical and histological severities of renal disease at 13 weeks compared to males. Surprisingly, sex-based differences in renal disease severity were lost in CD8 depleted → F1 mice due to an improvement in females and a worsening in males. CD8 intact → F1 female mice exhibited significantly greater donor and host effector (CD44hi, CD62Llo) CD4 T cells and ICOShi CD4 T follicular helper cells than males. CD8 depleted → F1 female mice exhibited a reduction in the absolute numbers of host, but not donor CD4 Tfh cells and lost the significant increase in host CD4 effector cells vs. males. Greater female IL-21 expression, a product of Tfh cells, was seen in CD8 intact → F1 and although reduced was still greater than male CD8 depleted → F1 mice. Thus, donor CD8 T cells have a critical role in mediating sex-based differences in lupus renal disease severity possibly through greater host ICOShi CD4 T cell involvement.
Keywords :
Glomerulonephritis , lupus , CD8 T cells , Graft-vs.-host disease
Journal title :
Clinical Immunology
Serial Year :
2010
Journal title :
Clinical Immunology
Record number :
1854563
Link To Document :
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