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Inducer in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus1

*
Section of Immunology, Department of Veterinary Microbiology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden; and
Section of Rheumatology, Department of Medical Sciences, University Hospital, Uppsala, Sweden
| Abstract |
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, which correlate to disease activity. We
previously identified an IFN-
-inducing factor (IIF) in the blood of
SLE patients that activated the natural IFN-
-producing cells in
cultures of normal PBMC. The SLE-IIF contained DNA and IgG, possibly as
small immune complexes. In our study, we demonstrated that SLE-IIF
correlated to the presence of anti-dsDNA Abs in patients and
contained anti-dsDNA Abs as an essential component. Purified
anti-DNA Abs or SLE-IgG caused only a weak IFN-
production in
cultures of normal PBMC in the presence of costimulatory IFN-
2b.
However, they converted the plasmid pcDNA3, which itself induced no
IFN-
production in PBMC, into an efficient IFN-
inducer. A human
monoclonal anti-ss/dsDNA Ab had the same effect. This
IFN-
-inducing activity of the plasmid was abolished by methylation,
suggesting that unmethylated CpG DNA motifs were important. Like IIF in
SLE serum, the combination of SLE-IgG and pcDNA3 appeared to stimulate
IFN-
production in natural IFN-
-producing cells, a unique cell
population resembling immature dendritic cells. The IFN-
production
was greatly enhanced by IFN-
2b and IFN-ß, and for SLE-IIF it was
also enhanced by GM-CSF but inhibited by IL-10. We have therefore
identified a new function of DNA-anti-DNA Ab complexes, IFN-
induction, that might be important in the pathogenesis of
SLE. | Introduction |
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subtypes, 1 IFN-ß and 1 IFN-
, all acting on the IFN-
ß
receptor (2, 3, 4). In particular during active disease, SLE
patients have an activated type I IFN system with detectable IFN-
in
blood and increased levels of type I IFN-inducible intracellular
proteins (5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11). The type I IFNs could be involved in
development and maintenance of SLE, because they have several
immunoregulatory effects that could interfere with development of self
tolerance and promote autoimmunity (3, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16). In support
of this, IFN-
therapy of patients with nonautoimmune disorders
results in frequent development of various autoimmune phenomena,
including antinuclear Abs, Abs to native DNA, and occasionally SLE-like
syndromes (17, 18, 19, 20, 21).
An ongoing IFN production in SLE suggests the presence of an IFN
inducer, because type I IFN gene expression is usually triggered by
microorganisms, especially viruses (3, 22, 23). In fact,
we recently described that sera from SLE patients frequently induced
production of IFN-
in normal PBMC in vitro (24). Our
further work indicated that this was due to an IFN-
-inducing factor
(SLE-IIF) and that the IFN-
production occurred in the natural
IFN-
-producing cells (IPC), which resemble immature dendritic cells
(25). Furthermore, the SLE-IIF activity was most prominent
in patients with active disease and IFN-
in serum and was strongly
enhanced by exposure of the PBMC in vitro to the combination of IFN-
and GM-CSF. The SLE-IIF had a molecular mass in the 300- to 1000-kDa
range and appeared to contain Ig and DNA, suggesting that it could
consist of DNA-anti-DNA Ab immune complexes.
The main purpose of our study was to identify the essential
IFN-
-inducing components in SLE-IIF and to clarify to what extent
the IFN-
production is regulated by different cytokines. We found
that anti-DNA Abs, probably with specificity for dsDNA, were
involved in triggering IFN-
production. Furthermore, the endogenous
DNA in SLE-IIF could be substituted for by a plasmid with
immunostimulatory DNA (isDNA) motifs containing unmethylated CpGs, and
such DNA together with purified anti-DNA Abs became a potent
IFN-
inducer. The IFN-
production induced in PBMC by
plasmid and SLE-IgG, like that induced by serum SLE-IIF, appeared
to occur in the natural IPC. We also found that the IFN-
production
was enhanced by IFN-
ß and in the case of serum SLE-IIF also by
GM-CSF, but strongly inhibited by IL-10.
| Materials and Methods |
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Nine patients who fulfilled the ACR classification criteria for SLE (26) were included. The patients (seven female and two male) had a median age of 32 years (range, 1674 years), a median duration of disease of 8 years (range, 232), and a median ACR index of 6 (range, 410). The median disease activity as assessed by a modified SLE disease activity index, where complement levels and anti-DNA Abs were excluded (27), was 4 (range, 022). One patient was untreated, 8 were treated with prednisolone (mean, 9.4 mg/day), 2 with cyclosporin A (mean, 125 mg/day), 2 with hydroxychloroquine sulfate (mean, 300 mg/day), 2 with azathioprine (mean, 75 mg/day), 1 with methotrexate (7.5 mg/week), and 1 with cyclophosphamide (100 mg/day). Four normal male blood donors served as controls [median age, 28 (range, 2031)]. Citrated plasma samples were obtained, converted to serum by addition of 1 M CaCl2 in 0.15 M NaCl to a final concentration of 10 mM CaCl2 and stored at -80°C. The study protocol was approved by the Committee of Ethics, Faculty of Medicine, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.
Preparation of IgG on protein G columns
The sera were 0.45 µm filtered, followed by 1 h of
incubation at 37°C with equal volumes of 2000 U/ml DNase I
(Boehringer Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany) in 100 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5)
and 10 mM MnCl2, to destroy endogenous DNA. They
were separated on protein G-Sepharose (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech,
Uppsala, Sweden) as recommended by the manufacturer. The pH of the
IgG-containing eluates was adjusted to pH 7 by addition of 1 M Tris-HCl
(pH 9.0), and the eluates were dialyzed against RPMI 1640 (ICN
Biomedical, Costa Mesa, CA) with penicillin (60 µg/ml), streptomycin
(100 µg/ml), L-glutamine (2 mM), and 20 mM HEPES. The IgG
fractions were used at a final concentration of 1 mg/ml and serum at
12.5% (v/v) in the IFN-
induction cultures (see below).
Separation on dsDNA-cellulose columns
The sera were 0.45 µm filtered and diluted with equal volumes
of 0.1 M Tris-HCl (pH 7.5) with 0.15 M NaCl. They were separated on
dsDNA cellulose or uncoupled cellulose columns (Worthington, Freehold,
NJ), using elution with 3 M MgCl2
(28). The eluates were stabilized with 1 mg/ml human serum
albumin (HSA; Pharmacia and Upjohn, Stockholm, Sweden). Both effluents
and eluates were desalted and transferred to RPMI 1640 medium
supplemented as described above using PD-10 columns (Amersham Pharmacia
Biotech). The approximate final IgG concentrations used in the IFN-
induction cultures were 1 mg/ml for effluents and 5 µg/ml for
eluates.
Herpes simplex virus
HSV type 1 was propagated in human WISH cells, grown in DMEM
(ICN Biomedicals, Aurora, OH) supplemented as above and with 5% FCS
(Myoclone, Life Technologies, Paisley, U.K.). The HSV at 2 x
107 PFU/ml was UV inactivated by 1 J at 254 nm
(UV-HSV) and used at optimal concentrations (10x dilution) for
induction of IFN-
.
Preparation of plasmids
The plasmid pcDNA3 (Invitrogen, San Diego, CA) was propagated in
Escherichia coli (Epicurian Coli XL-1-Blue Supercompetent
Cells, Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) and purified using EndoFree Plasmid
Maxi or Mega kit according to the manufacturers instructions (Qiagen,
Hilden, Germany). The content of endotoxin in the plasmid preparations
was estimated by the Limulus amebocyte lysate test (QCL-1000
test, BioWhittaker, Walkersville, MD), and a Detoxi-Gel column (Pierce,
Rockford, IL) was used according to the manufacturers instructions
when further endotoxin removal was necessary. Plasmid preparations
contained <0.1 endotoxin units/ml. The CpG dinucleotides in pcDNA3
were methylated using SssI methylase according to the
manufacturers instruction (New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA). The
enzyme was removed by phenol extraction, followed by repeated ethanol
precipitations and resuspension in endofree TE-buffer (Qiagen). The
methylation of CpG dinucleotides was verified by resistance to
HpaII digestion, and the endotoxin content was estimated as
described above. The pcDNA3 was used at a final concentration of 0.5
µg/ml in the IFN-
induction cultures.
Cytokines and anti-DNA mAb
When indicated, the cultures were supplemented with the
recombinant cytokines IFN-
2b (500 U/ml; Intron-A, Schering-Plough,
Bloomfield, NJ), IFN-ß1a (500 U/ml; Avonex, Biogen, Cambridge, MA),
IFN-
(500 U/ml; Genzyme, Cambridge, MA), GM-CSF (1 ng/ml; Leucomax,
Schering-Plough), IL-4 (10 ng/ml; Genzyme), IL-10 (10 ng/ml; Genzyme),
IL-12 (10 ng/ml; R&D Systems, Abingdon, U.K.), IL-13 (10 ng/ml; Pepro
Tech EC, London, U.K.), or IL-18 (100 ng/ml; Pepro Tech EC). The
indicated figures represent the final concentrations in the cultures.
For each cytokine, 10-fold lower and higher concentrations were also
tested.
The human anti-ss/dsDNA mAb MER-3 (Serotec, Oxford, U.K.) was dialyzed against RPMI 1640, supplemented as described above, and used at 2.5 µg/ml in the PBMC cultures.
Preparation and culture of PBMC for IFN-
induction
The PBMC were prepared by Ficoll-Hypaque (Pharmacia, Uppsala, Sweden) density gradient centrifugation of buffy coats from normal blood donors. The cells were washed in PBS and frozen as described (29). The cells were thawed immediately before use, washed twice, and resuspended in RPMI 1640 supplemented as described above and with heat-inactivated FCS at 5% final concentration. Cultures were in triplicates using final volumes of 0.1 ml/well and a cell concentration of 2 x 106/ml in 96-well flat-bottom microtiter plates (Nunclon, Nunc, Roskilde, Denmark). For flow cytometry, 1-ml medium volumes per well in 24-well plates (Nunc) were used, containing 8 x 106 cells. Serum fractions, Abs, HSV, plasmid, and combinations of them were incubated for 30 min at room temperature in the culture plates, before the PBMC and indicated cytokines were added. The cultures were incubated for 5 h (flow cytometry) or 24 h (all other experiments) at 37°C and 7% CO2.
Immunoassays
The levels of IFN-
in culture supernatants were determined by
a dissociation-enhanced lanthanide fluoroimmunoassay (DELFIA) as
described (24), with modifications. In brief, the mAb
LT27:293 to human IFN-
was used for capture. This mAb recognizes
most IFN-
subtypes, except the IFN-
2b often used for
costimulation. Samples and standard were then coincubated with the
europium-labeled LT27:297 anti-IFN-
mAb for 1 h at 37°C
in the LT27:293-coated immunoplates. The lower limit of detection of
this assay was 2 U leukocyte IFN-
per ml. For determination of
IFN-
in serum, a more sensitive DELFIA (detection limit,
0.5 U/ml)
was used (24). In this assay, mAbs LT27:293 and LT27:273
were used for capture. The IFN-
immunoassay standard was calibrated
against the National Institutes of Health reference leukocyte IFN-
GA-23-902-530.
Serum levels of anti-dsDNA Abs were determined by an anti-dsDNA ELISA kit (Dako, Glostrup, Denmark) as recommended by the manufacturer. The levels of total IgG in serum were determined by a conventional ELISA, using rabbit anti-human Ig (Dako) for capture, peroxidase-labeled rabbit anti-human IgG (Dako) for detection, and human IgG (Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA) as standard.
Analysis of cells by flow cytometry
The PBMC were stimulated for 5 h either by UV-HSV or by the
combination pcDNA3 and protein G-purified IgG in the presence of
costimulatory IFN-
2b and GM-CSF. The cells were then fixed in
paraformaldehyde and stained for intracellular IFN-
as described
(30). Briefly, the fixed PBMC were permeabilized with
Tween 20 and subsequently incubated with the biotinylated
anti-IFN-
mAb LT27:295 and finally with PE-conjugated
streptavidin (Jackson ImmunoResearch). The frequency, staining
intensity, as well as light scatter characteristics of the
IFN-
-containing cells were analyzed with a FACScan flow cytometer
and Cellquest software (Becton Dickinson, San Jose, CA).
Statistical analysis
Data are expressed as means ± SD. The significance of differences between groups was determined by ANOVA in combination with Fischers protected least significance difference. Correlation analysis was performed with the Spearman rank correlation coefficient. The StatView 5.0 program was used, taking p < 0.05 as minimum significant level.
| Results |
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production by PBMC caused by SLE sera correlates to
anti-dsDNA Abs and is enhanced by plasmid DNA
Normal PBMC were cultured for 24 h with sera from nine SLE
patients and four normal individuals, and the IFN-
produced was
measured by immunoassay. As described before (25), the SLE
sera but not control sera caused production of IFN-
(Table I
). Furthermore, addition of recombinant
IFN-
2b to the PBMC cultures markedly increased the IFN-
production induced by SLE sera and caused the appearance of low levels
of IFN-
in cultures with control sera. The levels of IFN-
,
anti-dsDNA Abs, and IgG were determined for the individual sera
(Table I
), and the results indicate that IFN-
- and anti-DNA
Ab-positive sera were the most potent IFN-
inducers. In fact, the
capacity to induce IFN-
production showed a positive correlation to
the serum concentration of anti-dsDNA Abs (r = 0.8
both with and without IFN-
2b costimulation; p =
0.006 and p = 0.005, respectively), but not to the
serum concentration of IgG (r = 0.4 with and
r = 0.1 without costimulation).
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production in those PBMC cultures
containing SLE serum with a significant level of anti-DNA Abs
(Table I
production was seen with
the SLE sera that had low concentrations of anti-DNA Abs and with
the control sera. Costimulation with IFN-
2b further increased the
IFN-
production caused by plasmid addition, although this increase
was proportionally smaller with the anti-DNA Ab-containing SLE
sera.
Induction of IFN-
production in PBMC by SLE-IgG and pcDNA3
To further explore the nature of the SLE-IIF, we treated the sera
from the nine SLE patients and four normal individuals with DNase I. As
previously reported, this destroys their IFN-
-inducing activity
(25). The IgG prepared from these treated sera by protein
G separation completely lacked IFN-
-inducing capacity in PBMC
cultures (Table II
). However, in the
presence of costimulatory IFN-
2b, significant levels of IFN-
were
induced by especially the three SLE-IgG preparations with high levels
of anti-DNA Abs, but not by the control IgG.
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production, even in the presence of costimulatory
IFN-
2b (Table II
in the presence of the four SLE-IgG preparations with significant
levels of anti-DNA Abs (>20 U/ml). In the presence of
costimulatory IFN-
2b, these four SLE-Ig preparations, together with
pcDNA3, caused a very high IFN-
production, in the order of
20005000 U/ml. The remaining SLE-IgG and the control IgG preparations
gave IFN-
levels that were much lower. Finally, methylation of
cytosines in the CpG motifs of pcDNA3 completely inhibited the IFN-
induction by the plasmid.
Consequently, we have indications that immunostimulatory plasmid DNA
can replace the DNA believed to be part of SLE-IIF in serum.
Furthermore, IgG appears to convert such plasmid DNA into a potent
IFN-
inducer in PBMC, especially when these cells are costimulated
by IFN-
2b.
Anti-DNA Abs are essential in the IFN-
induction
The finding that pcDNA3 could reconstitute DNase I treated
SLE-IIF, as well as the correlation between SLE-IIF activity and serum
anti-dsDNA Ab levels, suggested that anti-dsDNA Abs could be
part of SLE-IIF. This was tested by separating serum from SLE patients
with anti-dsDNA Abs on dsDNA-cellulose columns and on control
uncoupled cellulose columns. Normal serum was used as control in the
dsDNA cellulose separations. Using the dsDNA cellulose column, >95%
of applied IgG was recovered in the effluent and <0.07% in the
eluate, the latter containing most of the anti-DNA Abs (Table III
).
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-inducing capacity in cultures
of normal PBMC. It was found that passage of SLE serum over
dsDNA-cellulose, but not control uncoupled cellulose, markedly reduced
the IFN-
induction caused by pcDNA3, regardless of whether
costimulatory IFN-
2b was present or not (Table III
, but relatively high levels of
IFN-
were seen in the presence of costimulatory IFN-
2b (Table III
production in the PBMC, which was further increased in the
presence of costimulatory IFN-
2b. In general, the IFN-
-inducing
capacity of purified anti-DNA Abs appeared similar to or higher
than that of serum or purified IgG (Table III
production, which was further enhanced by costimulatory
IFN-
2b.
Direct comparison between the concentration (units per milliliter) of
anti-dsDNA Abs in the dsDNA-cellulose eluate or in the protein
G-purified IgG and their IFN-
-inducing capacity indicated that the
dsDNA-cellulose-purified preparation was generally more active (Fig. 1
). This could at least in part be due to
a decline of IFN-
-inducing capacity at higher concentrations of the
protein G-purified IgG. In particular, the purified anti-DNA Abs
induced considerable IFN-
production in a dose-dependent manner when
costimulated by IFN-
2b, and this was greatly increased in the
presence of pcDNA3 (Fig. 1
). Finally, the dsDNA-cellulose itself did
not appear to contribute to the results because the eluates or
effluents from normal serum separated on dsDNA-cellulose induced no
IFN-
production when combined with pcDNA3 and costimulatory
IFN-
2b (Table III
).
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-inducing capacity of SLE serum
or the combination SLE-IgG and pcDNA3
Because recombinant IFN-
2b in most cases had a marked
stimulatory effect on the IFN-
production induced in PBMC cultures
by SLE sera and by SLE-IgG alone or in combination with pcDNA3, it was
of interest to examine the effects of other cytokines. Normal PBMC were
therefore stimulated by SLE serum (SLE 1), the combination of SLE-IgG
(SLE 1) and pcDNA3, or UV-inactivated HSV. As a control, PBMC were
cultured with normal serum (NS), medium with or without pcDNA3, or
NS-IgG with or without pcDNA3. The PBMC cultures further contained
costimulatory IFN-
2b or not, as well as one of the cytokines
IFN-ß, IFN-
, GM-CSF, IL-4, IL-10, IL-12, IL-13, or IL-18.
With SLE serum alone as inducer, IFN-
2b, IFN-ß, and GM-CSF had
significant (p < 0.001) stimulatory effects on
the IFN-
production (Fig. 2
A). The apparent inhibitory
effect of IL-10 (Fig. 2
A) was not statistically significant.
With the combination of SLE serum and costimulatory IFN-
2b, IFN-ß
had no additional stimulatory effects, whereas GM-CSF further increased
the IFN-
production in at least an additive manner
(p < 0.001). The IL-10 here markedly inhibited
the IFN-
production (p < 0.001).
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2b (p = 0.003) and IFN-ß
(p < 0.001) enhanced the IFN-
production,
whereas IL-10 was inhibitory (p < 0.001), both
with and without IFN-
2b (Fig. 2
production in the presence of IFN-
2b
(p < 0.003). When UV-HSV was used as inducer,
a small stimulatory effect was obtained only with the combination of
GM-CSF and IFN-
2b (p < 0.001), but a clear
inhibition of the IFN-
production (p <
0.001) was seen with IL-10 in both the presence and the absence of
costimulatory IFN-
2b (Fig. 2
,
IL-4, IL-12, IL-13, and IL-18 had no significant effects on any of the
three inducers (Fig. 2
production in the
presence or absence of the tested cytokines (results not shown).
Characterization of the IFN-
-producing cells induced by SLE-IgG
combined with pcDNA3
A previous study demonstrated that the IFN-
-producing cells
induced by SLE-IIF or by HSV had apparently identical antigenic
phenotypes and a characteristic frequency and light scatter
(25). We examined whether also the IFN-
-producing cells
induced by the combination SLE-IgG and pcDNA3 resembled NIPC, by
stimulating normal PBMC with SLE-IgG (SLE 1) and pcDNA3 or with UV-HSV
in the presence of costimulatory IFN-
2b and GM-CSF. After 5 h,
the cells were stained for intracellular IFN-
and analyzed by flow
cytometry. The IFN-
-containing cells were gated and with both
inducers consisted of a brightly fluorescent population (Fig. 3
A), with a frequency among
all PBMC of 0.04% for the IgG-pcDNA3 and 0.12% for the HSV inducer.
These frequencies were proportional to the IFN-
concentrations in
culture medium at 5 h that were 190 and 556 U/ml. The scatter
characteristics of the IFN-
-positive cells were the same for the two
inducers (Fig. 3
B), corresponding to a cell population in
between lymphocytes and monocytes (Fig. 3
C).
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| Discussion |
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production in normal
PBMC in vitro (25). Several findings in the present study
indicate that anti-DNA Abs are an essential part of this
IFN-
-inducing factor (SLE-IIF). Thus, in vitro SLE-IIF activity
correlated to serum concentrations of anti-dsDNA Abs, and the
SLE-IIF activity was retained by, and could partially be eluted from, a
dsDNA-cellulose column. Furthermore, the IFN-
-inducing capacity of
SLE serum, SLE-IgG, and eluted anti-dsDNA Abs was greatly increased
when combined with plasmid pcDNA3. Finally, a human mAb against
ss/dsDNA combined with pcDNA3 induced IFN-
production in PBMC. We
therefore conclude that we have identified a new action of anti-DNA
Abs, induction of IFN-
production when combined with the appropriate
kind of DNA.
We found that unmethylated but not methylated pcDNA3, when combined
with anti-dsDNA Abs, could induce IFN-
production in PBMC.
Importantly, the methylation does not influence the binding of
anti-dsDNA Abs to the plasmid (our unpublished results). This
indicates the importance of immunostimulatory (is) DNA sequences with
unmethylated CpGs in the plasmid, previously shown to have
IFN-
-inducing ability (31, 32, 33, 34). The fact that the
SLE-IIF is sensitive to DNase I but not RNases (25) and
our present finding that it could be replaced by unmethylated plasmid
DNA suggest but do not prove the presence of isDNA in SLE-IIF. It is,
however, interesting that isDNA sequences in the serum of SLE patients
have been identified by molecular cloning (35, 36, 37), that
the excess DNA present in immune complexes in SLE is hypomethylated,
and that isDNA have been suggested to have a pathogenic role in SLE
(38). Such DNA could be of either microbial or cellular
origin, the latter possibility supported by observations of methylation
defects and increased apoptosis in SLE (reviewed in Ref.
38). To our knowledge, biologically active unmethylated
isDNA has, however, not been directly isolated and characterized in SLE
patients. Such work is highly warranted, as is the identification of
the origin of such DNA. We are now examining the hypothesis that it
consists of small hypomethylated isDNA sequences derived from apoptotic
cells, possibly in the form of nucleosomes.
It has previously been shown that isDNA can induce IFN-
ß
production in PBMC preferentially when combined with lipofectin
(39). The mechanism whereby anti-DNA Abs convert
plasmid isDNA to a potent IFN-
inducer could therefore also involve
a lipofectin-like transfecting effect. In fact, certain anti-DNA
Abs can penetrate the cell membrane and finally localize to the nucleus
(40, 41, 42). Such Abs can also transport larger proteins into
cells (43), conceivably also DNA or DNA-protein complexes
such as nucleosomes. Indeed, enhanced internalization of nucleosomes in
cells by Abs to DNA or histones has been reported (44). We
therefore suggest that the SLE-IIF present in the serum of SLE patients
at least consists of complexes between anti-dsDNA Abs and isDNA and
that such complexes are able to traverse cell membranes and by means of
isDNA trigger IFN-
production. It remains, however, to be determined
whether additional important components are present in SLE-IIF, such as
Abs with other specificities and complement factors. Furthermore, as
discussed above, the DNA component must be directly identified.
The combination of anti-DNA Abs and plasmid pcDNA3 was the most
efficient IFN-
inducer in PBMC cultures. However, several DNase
I-treated IgG preparations from normal donors and from patients with
inactive SLE had a low but significant IFN-
-inducing activity
together with pcDNA3, provided the PBMC were costimulated by IFN-
2b.
It is possible that this is due to the presence of low concentrations
of anti-DNA Abs that are masked in whole serum (45, 46). We also noted that whereas anti-DNA Abs purified on
dsDNA-cellulose or SLE-IgG alone failed to cause IFN-
production in
normal PBMC, costimulation of PBMC with IFN-
2b resulted in a
significant production of IFN-
. Obviously, this could be due to the
presence of residual isDNA bound to the anti-DNA Abs.
Alternatively, some isDNA could actually emanate from dying cells in
the PBMC cultures, an interesting possibility which is being
explored.
The cytokine IFN-
2b markedly enhanced the IFN-
production by PBMC
cocultured with serum, IgG, or separated anti-DNA Abs, combined or
not with pcDNA3. In some cases, IFN-
2b costimulation actually
appeared essential. When the effects of a selected number of cytokines
on the IFN-
-inducing capacity of SLE serum were examined, only
IFN-
ß and GM-CSF were found to be clearly stimulatory, and their
effects were also additive. The results agree with those previously
obtained using glutaraldehyde-fixed HSV-infected WISH cells as IFN-
inducer (47), but not using the UV-HSV in the present
study. Furthermore, the IFN-
production induced by SLE-IgG combined
with pcDNA3 was only moderately enhanced by type I IFN, and not clearly
by GM-CSF. The reason could be that the inducers UV-HSV and plasmid
pcDNA3 themselves might initiate sufficient production of costimulatory
cytokines in the PBMC cultures. The observed costimulatory effects of
IFN-
and GM-CSF could be important also in vivo and in this way
could be of pathogenic significance in SLE. For instance, a transient
production of IFN-
ß and GM-CSF caused by infections in patients
with inactive SLE may precipitate a more prolonged and systemic
production of IFN-
driven by the SLE-IIF and thereby activate the
disease.
The costimulatory effect of type I IFN on the production of IFN-
induced by SLE-IIF is most likely related to a phenomenon termed
priming, mainly studied with viral IFN inducers (3). In
fact, such priming may under certain conditions be essential for
IFN-
ß gene expression (48). The priming is considered
to be caused by up-regulated synthesis and/or activation of
transcription factors such as STAT1, STAT2, p48 protein, IRF-1, and
IRF-3 that are important in the activation of type I IFN gene
expression (22, 23, 49, 50, 51). The GM-CSF may have a similar
mode of action, because it can activate certain transcription factors
in dendritic cells (52), that may enhance type I IFN gene
expression.
The cytokines IFN-
, IL-4, IL-12, IL-13, and IL-18 had no clear
effects on any of the IFN-
inducers in the present study. In
contrast, IL-10 strongly inhibited the IFN-
production caused by all
studied inducers, especially that induced by SLE serum and the
combination of SLE-IgG and pcDNA3. These results extend previous
findings that IL-10 inhibit virus-induced IFN-
production in human
PBMC (53). Because IL-10 also inhibits production of
cytokines such as IL-1ß, IL-6, IL-8, TNF-
, GM-CSF, and
granulocyte-CSF (54, 55, 56), the strong inhibitory effects in
our study are probably due to a general inhibition of production of
cytokines, including costimulatory cytokines. Increased levels of IL-10
have been reported in SLE patients and suggested to have a pathogenic
role (57, 58, 59), for instance by direct stimulation of
autoimmune B cells (58) or induction of apoptosis in
activated T cells (60). Because type I IFN can enhance
production of IL-10 (61, 62), the continual IFN-
production in SLE could in fact be one cause of the overproduction of
IL-10 in this disease. As indicated by the results of the present
study, IL-10 could also perhaps have a paradoxical beneficial effect in
SLE patients by inhibiting the IFN-
production.
The combination of SLE-IgG and pcDNA3 induced IFN-
production in
infrequent cells among PBMC with the same light scatter characteristics
and high IFN-
production per cell as the natural IPC previously
shown to respond to SLE serum (25), bacteria
(63), and several different types of virus (30, 64, 65). The phenotypes of these cells (25, 30)
indicate that they are immature dendritic cells that for instance do
not express the costimulatory molecules CD80 and CD86, or perhaps less
likely represent a new type of leukocyte. The same cells are markedly
decreased in number in the blood of SLE patients (24), but
it remains to be clarified whether they are the source of the IFN-
also in vivo and whether they are localized to tissues, such as
lymphoid organs.
We previously suggested that the prolonged production of IFN-
in
vivo in SLE patients is the result of stimulation by SLE-IIF and could
be of pathogenic significance and pivotal in breaking tolerance to
nucleic acids and associated proteins (25). That
possibility is suggested by the various immunomodulatory actions of
type I IFN, including promotion of expression of the IL-12 receptor and
survival of activated T cells, which would counteract maintenance of
self tolerance (3, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16). It is more directly supported
by the wide range of autoantibodies and autoimmune diseases appearing
in patients treated with IFN-
(17, 18, 19, 20). An increased
rate of apoptosis caused in, for instance, T cells by IL-10
(60) and in virus-infected cells by type I IFN
(66) would generate relevant nuclear autoantigens and
perhaps endogenous isDNA, the latter forming IFN-
-inducing complexes
with anti-DNA Abs. It is also interesting that type I IFN
production and autoantigen presentation occur in similar if not
identical dendritic cells, which should facilitate the autoimmunization
process. Our results further suggest that costimulation with at least
type I IFN and GM-CSF is important for the induction of IFN-
production. It is therefore possible that an initial period of type I
IFN production, for instance caused by viral infections, is required
for both autoimmunization and initiating the subsequent IFN-
production caused by IFN-
-inducing immune complexes. A mechanism
resembling a vicious circle may subsequently sustain the disease
process by means of continuous IFN-
production, occasionally boosted
by infections or other processes that generate more autoantibodies,
costimulatory cytokines, and isDNA.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Gunnar Alm, Immunology(V), BMC, P. O. Box 588, 75123 Uppsala, Sweden. E-mail address: ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus; DELFIA, dissociation-enhanced lanthanide fluoroimmunoassay; IIF, IFN-
inducing factor; IPC, IFN-
producing cells; isDNA, immunostimulatory DNA; UV-HSV, HSV inactivated by UV light; NS, normal serum. ![]()
Received for publication April 21, 1999. Accepted for publication September 15, 1999.
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