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The Journal of Immunology, 1999, 163: 5265-5268.
Copyright © 1999 by The American Association of Immunologists

Autoimmune Myocarditis Does Not Require B Cells for Antigen Presentation1

Susan Malkiel, Stephen Factor and Betty Diamond2

Departments of Microbiology and Immunology, Medicine, and Pathology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY 10461

T cells constitute the pathogenic effector cell population in autoimmune myocarditis in BALB/c mice. Using mice rendered deficient for B cells by a targeted disruption to the IgM transmembrane domain or by treatment with anti-IgM Ab from birth, we asked whether B cells are a critical APC in the induction of autoimmune myocarditis. B cell-deficient mice immunized with cardiac myosin develop myocarditis comparable in incidence and severity to that in wild-type mice, suggesting that autoreactive T cells that cause myocarditis in BALB/c mice are activated by macrophages or dendritic cells. Since it does not appear that presentation of cryptic epitopes is critical for the breakdown of self tolerance, potentially pathogenic T cells recognizing dominant myosin epitopes must have escaped tolerization. Either anatomic sequestration of cardiac myosin peptide-MHC complexes or subthreshold presentation of cardiac myosin peptides by conventional APC can explain the survival of these autoreactive T cells.




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