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The Journal of Immunology, 2002, 169: 722-731.
Copyright © 2002 by The American Association of Immunologists

Induction of CD4 T Cell Changes in Murine AIDS Is Dependent on Costimulation and Involves a Dysregulation of Homeostasis1

Michael H. Yen*,{dagger}, Nancy Lepak{dagger} and Susan L. Swain2,{dagger}

* Department of Biology, University of California at San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093; and {dagger} Trudeau Institute, Saranac Lake, NY 12983

Strong CD4 T cell activation and proliferation are seen in susceptible mice infected with the murine retroviral inoculum, LP-BM5, which produces an immunodeficiency syndrome called murine AIDS (MAIDS). We developed a short term adoptive transfer model of MAIDS to examine the requirements for the CD4 T cell response. Naive CD4 T cells from uninfected donors responded quickly after adoptive transfer into MAIDS-infected hosts, becoming activated and proliferating within several days. Using blocking mAbs to costimulatory ligands and CD4 T cells deficient in expression of their receptors, we found that the CD4 T cell response requires CD28:B7.1/B7.2 interactions, but not CTLA4 or CD40-CD40 ligand interactions. Naive CD4 T cells did not respond in H-2M-deficient mice with MAIDS, suggesting that disease requires recognition of self peptide-MHC complexes. The self MHC-dependent division and accumulation of large numbers of CD4 T cells suggest that MAIDS involves a disruption of the balance of homeostatic signals. Supporting this hypothesis, CD4 T cells from mice with MAIDS failed to regulate the homeostatic division of naive CD4 T cells in a cotransfer model. Thus, a combination of up-regulation of costimulatory ligands and disruption of homeostatic control may be responsible for CD4 lymphoproliferation in MAIDS.




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