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* Department of Dermatology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599;
Department of Dermatology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI 53226;
Department of Dermatology, University of Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany
| Abstract |
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), and lymphocytes and their functional
relationship in the immunopathogenesis of this disease model by using
mice deficient in these cells. Wild-type, T cell-deficient, and T and B
cell-deficient mice injected intradermally with pathogenic
anti-murine BP180 IgG exhibited extensive subepidermal blisters. In
contrast, mice deficient in neutrophils, MCs, and M
were resistant
to experimental BP. MCs play a major role in neutrophil recruitment
into the dermis. Furthermore, M
-mediated neutrophil infiltration
depends on MC activation/degranulation. | Introduction |
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)
(1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8). MCs found in BP lesions exhibit
morphological changes suggesting degranulation (7, 9).
Lesional skin in BP patients exhibits several granular proteins derived
from leukocytes, such as eosinophil cationic protein, eosinophil major
basic protein, and neutrophil-derived myeloperoxidase (MPO)
(10, 11, 12). Various inflammatory mediators that can activate
MCs or leukocytes have been identified in lesional skin and/or blister
fluids of BP patients, including C5a, eosinophilic/neutrophilic
chemotactic factors, histamine, leukotrienes, and various cytokines
(e.g., IL-1, -2, -5, -6, -8, TNFs, and IFN-
) (13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20).
Several proteinases are also found in BP blister fluid, including
plasmin, collagenase, elastase, and 92-kDa gelatinase
(21, 22, 23, 24).
An experimental model of BP that involves the passive transfer of
anti-murine BP180 (mBP180) Abs into neonatal BALB/c mice reproduces
the key immunopathological features of this human autoimmune disease,
i.e., IgG and complement deposition at the DEJ, inflammatory
infiltration of the upper dermis, and subepidermal blistering
(25). We further showed that the pathogenicity of
anti-mBP180 Abs is dependent on complement activation
(26), MC degranulation (27), and neutrophil
recruitment (28). In the present study, we investigated
the role of M
, T and B lymphocytes, and compared the relative
contribution of these inflammatory cells in subepidermal blistering in
experimental BP.
| Materials and Methods |
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Breeding pairs of C57BL/6J, MC-deficient WCB6F1-MgfSl/MgfSl-d (referred to as MC-) mice (29), T cell-deficient nude (referred to as T-) mice, T and B cell-deficient C57BL-6J-Rag1tm1Mom (referred to as T and B-) mice (30) were purchased from The Jackson Laboratory (Bar Harbor, ME) and maintained at the Medical College of Wisconsin Animal Resource Center (Milwaukee, WI). Neonatal mice (2436 h old with body weights between 1.4 and 1.6 g) were used for passive transfer experiments.
Preparation of pathogenic rabbit anti-murine IgG
The preparation of recombinant mBP180 and the immunization of rabbits were performed as previously described (25). The titers of rabbit anti-mBP180 Abs in the rabbit sera and in the purified IgG fractions were assayed by indirect immunofluorescence (IF) using mouse skin cryosections as substrate (25). The pathogenicity of these IgG preparations was tested by passive transfer experiments as described below. One pathogenic anti-mBP180 IgG (referred to as R530) and one control IgG (referred to as R50) were used (26).
Induction of experimental BP and animal evaluation
A 50-µl dose of sterile IgG in PBS was administered to neonatal mice by intradermal (i.d.; 2.64 mg IgG/g of body weight). The injection techniques have been described elsewhere (25, 28). The skin of neonatal mice from the test and control groups was examined 12 h after the IgG injection. The extent of cutaneous disease was scored as follows: , no detectable skin disease; 1+, mild erythematous reaction with no evidence of the "epidermal detachment" sign (this sign was elicited by gentle friction of the mouse skin which, when positive, produced fine, persistent wrinkling of the epidermis); 2+, intense erythema and epidermal detachment sign involving 1050% of the epidermis in localized areas; and 3+, intense erythema with frank epidermal detachment sign involving >50% of the epidermis. The animals were then sacrificed and the following specimens were obtained. Skin sections were taken for light microscopy (H&E staining) and for direct IF analysis to detect rabbit IgG and mouse C3 deposition at the basement membrane zone (BMZ). Sera of injected animals were obtained for indirect IF assay to determine the circulating titers of anti-mBP180 IgG. Direct and indirect IF analyses were performed as previously described (25). Monospecific FITC-conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG was obtained commercially (Kirkeggard & Perry Laboratories, Gaithersburg, MD). Monospecific goat anti-mouse C3 was purchased from Cappel Laboratories (Durham, NC).
Analysis of the inflammatory cells in the dermis by flow cytometry
Isolation, identification, and quantification of the dermal inflammatory cells were done by following published protocols (31, 32) with some minor modifications. Briefly, skin sections (8 x 8 mm) at the IgG-injecting sites were obtained and rinsed in 70% ethanol. The skin sections were cut into 4 x 4-mm sheets and submerged in culture medium into a 6-well plate. Each well contained 4 ml of RPMI 1640 with 25 mM HEPES, 10% heat-inactivated FBS and penicillin/streptomycin. The plate was incubated at 37°C for 6 h in a 5% CO2 incubator. The cells spontaneously emigrating out of the skin sections were pooled and incubated for additional 20 min at 37°C in PBS with 2 mg/ml glucose and without calcium and magnesium. The pooled cells were washed twice in HBSS without phenol red.
The dermal inflammatory cells were identified by characteristic size
(forward scatter) and granulosity (side scatter) combined with
two-color flow cytometric analysis (31, 32). The
neutrophils were identified as small cells, Ly-6G bright (RB6-8C5; BD
PharMingen, San Diego, CA), and negative for F4/80 (A3-1; Caltag
Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) or MHC class II (25-9-17; BD PharMingen).
The M
were identified as F4/80 positive or Mac-3 positive (M3/84; BD
PharMingen) and MHC class II low or negative. The T lymphocytes were
identified by their small size and by CD3 (145-2C11; BD PharMingen)
expression; B lymphocytes were identified by CD19 (1D3; BD PharMingen);
the eosinophils were identified by their granulosity associated with
F4/80 lightly positive and MHC class II negative. Rat IgG2b (A95-1; BD
PharMingen) and IgG2a (R35-95; BD PharMingen) were used as the Isotype
controls. One million cells were washed once with BPS/1% FBS/0.4%
sodium azide and then incubated with Fc Blocker (CD16/CD32; BD
PharMingen) for 15 min at 4°C. The suspension was then centrifuged
and the pellet was resuspended in 30 µl of PBS/3% BSA, followed by
adding 1.5 µl of labeled Ab. After incubation for 30 min at 4°C,
the cells were washed three times with PBS/1% FBS/0.4% sodium azide,
and the cells were analyzed by flow cytometry. For each sample,
104 cells were analyzed. Each cell population was
expressed as number of cells per skin section.
M
depletion
Carrageenan (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO), a sulfated
polygalactose that destroys M
, was used to selectively deplete M
(33). Carrageenan was dissolved in PBS and injected i.p.
(0.2 mg/g body weight) into C57BL/6J mice according to previously
described protocols (34, 35). Carrageenan treatment
resulted in a severe depletion of M
(8- to 9-fold reduction). A
total of 36 h later, the M
-depleted mice (referred to as
M
-) were injected i.d. with pathogenic
anti-mBP180 IgG. The animals were examined 12 h post IgG
injection.
Neutrophil depletion
Polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) depletion and injection procedures were performed as described (28). Briefly, A polyclonal rabbit anti-murine PMN Ab, AI-A31140, which selectively depletes mouse neutrophils in vivo, was purchased from Accurate Chemical & Scientific (Westbury, NY). Mice were depleted of PMN by two i.p. injections of AI-A31140 (10 mg IgG in 50 µl of PBS per injection) given 12 h apart. The control groups received 2 x 50 µl of normal rabbit IgG (10 mg IgG in 50 µl of PBS). PMN-depleted animals received one 50-µl i.d. (2.64 mg/g body weight/day) injection of pathogenic anti-mBP180 IgG, 12 h after anti-PMN treatment. The animals were then sacrificed and the skin and sera of mice from the test and control groups were examined 12 h later as described above.
Quantitation of MCs and MC degranulation
Lesional and nonlesional skin sections of IgG-injected mice were fixed in 10% Formalin. Paraffin sections (5 µm thick) were prepared and stained with toluidine blue and H&E. Total numbers of MCs were counted in five fields and classified as degranulated (>10% of the granules exhibiting fusion or discharge) or normal as described previously (27, 36). The results were expressed as percentage of MC degranulation.
In vivo inhibition of MC degranulation
Neonatal +/+ mice were pretreated with cromolyn sodium (10 µg/g body weight), a MC degranulation inhibitor (37, 38), and 2 h later injected i.d. with pathogenic IgG (2.64 mg/g body weight). Twelve hours after IgG injection, the animals were examined for clinical blisters and the skin sections were analyzed by IF, H&E, and toluidine blue staining. Skin neutrophil infiltration was quantified by MPO assay.
Quantitation of skin site PMN accumulation
Tissue MPO activity in skin sites of the injected animals was assayed as described (39, 40). A standard reference curve was first established using known concentrations of purified MPO. The skin samples were extracted by homogenization in an extraction buffer containing 0.1 M Tris-Cl (pH 7.6), 0.15 M NaCl, and 0.5% hexadecyl trimethylammoniumbromide. MPO activity in the supernatant fraction was measured by the change in OD460 resulting from decomposition of H2O2 in the presence of o-dianisidine. MPO content was expressed as relative MPO activity (OD460 reading per milligram of protein). Protein concentrations were determined by the Bio-Rad dye binding assay (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) using BSA as a standard.
Neutrophil isolation
Mouse neutrophils were isolated from heparinized blood by dextran sedimentation followed by separation on a density gradient as described (41). RBCs were removed from the cell preparation by hypotonic lysis in 0.2% NaCl. Neutrophils were washed and resuspended in cold PBS/10 mM glucose, counted in a hemocytometer, and adjusted to a concentration of 1 x 107 cells/ml. Neutrophil purity of the final cell preparation was consistently >96% as determined by cell-cytospin and LeukoStat staining (Fisher Diagnostics, Orangeburg, NY). The viability of the neutrophils was >96% as determined by trypan blue exclusion.
i.d. injection of neutrophils
M
-deficient mice were injected i.d. with pathogenic
anti-mBP180 IgG (2.64 mg/g body weight/50 µl of PBS). Two hours
later, these mice received 5 x 105
neutrophils i.d. (in 50 µl of PBS/10 mM glucose) at the same site
(42). The animals were analyzed 12 h after the IgG
injections as described above.
IL-8 pretreatment of M
-deficient mice
Recombinant human IL-8, purchased from R&D Systems (Minneapolis,
MN), was stored at 1 mg/ml in sterile PBS. Single i.d. injection of
IL-8 (50 ng in 50 µl of PBS) or an equivalent amount of BSA, was
given into neonatal M
-deficient mice 60 min before i.d. injection of
rabbit anti-mBP180 IgG (2.64 mg/g body weight in 50 µl)
(28). Control animals received an equivalent amount of
normal rabbit IgG in place of the anti-mBP180 IgG. Twelve hours
after the IgG injections, the animals were analyzed as described
above.
Statistical analysis
The data were expressed as mean ± SEM and were analyzed using the Students paired t test. A value of p < 0.05 was considered significant.
| Results |
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Pathogenic anti-BP180 IgG induces intensive cutaneous
inflammation and recruits numerous inflammatory cells into the dermis.
To quantify these cells within the dermis, mice were injected i.d. with
anti-BP180 or control Abs. Twenty-four hours later, the cells
emigrating from the IgG-injected dermis were recovered and analyzed by
flow cytometry. As shown in Fig. 1
, the
number of neutrophils, M
, T lymphocytes, and B lymphocytes were
significantly increased in mice injected with pathogenic IgG than mice
injected with control Ab. The influx of eosinophils remains the same
between the pathogenic IgG-treated and control groups. These results
were similar to findings obtained by routine histology staining of the
mouse skin sections.
|
, but not B and T lymphocytes, are required
for subepidermal blistering in experimental BP
To compare relative contributions of different inflammatory cells
in experimental BP, neonatal control, and mice deficient in
neutrophils, MCs, M
, T cells, and B and T cells were injected i.d.
with pathogenic anti-mBP180 IgG R530 (n = 10 for
each group). Twelve hours after IgG injection, wild-type control, T
cell-deficient, and B and T
cell-deficient mice developed blisters with similar disease scores
(Fig. 2
, A and G; see also Table I
). Direct IF showed deposition of rabbit
IgG and murine C3 at the cutaneous BMZ. Histological examination of the
skin of mice revealed DEJ separation with neutrophil infiltration in
the dermis (Fig. 2
, B and H). In contrast, the
injected animals deficient in neutrophils, MCs, and M
were resistant
to experimental BP (Fig. 2
, C, E, and
I; see also Table I
). There was no blister formation (Fig. 2
, D, F, and J), despite the presence
of IgG and mouse C3 at the BMZ when examined by direct IF (Table I
).
The positive direct IF staining ruled out the possibility that
deficiency of neutrophils, MCs, or M
impairs the binding of IgG to
its target or complement activation.
|
|
(Fig. 3
-deficient mice
(p < 0.05), respectively. Taken together,
these data demonstrated that neutrophils, MCs, and M
, but not T and
B lymphocytes, are involved in subepidermal blistering in
experimental BP.
|
are not involved in MC activation, but play an accessory role
in recruiting neutrophils in experimental BP
To determine whether M
play a role in MC
activation/degranulation, M
-sufficient and M
-deficient mice were
injected i.d. with pathogenic IgG. The total number of MCs and the
percentage of MC degranulation in the IgG-injected skin were quantified
at different time periods after IgG injection. As expected, wild-type
mice (n = 5) injected with pathogenic IgG developed
subepidermal blisters 12 h after IgG injection (Table I
), while
M
-deficient mice (n = 5) injected with pathogenic
IgG did not show any sign of skin blistering (Table I
). Toluidine blue
staining showed a slightly (but not significantly) higher degree of MC
degranulation in the skin of M
-sufficient as compared with
M
-deficient mice injected with pathogenic IgG at 2 and 12 h
post-IgG injection (Fig. 4
A,
a and c). As expected, MC degranulation in the
skin of M
-sufficient and M
-deficient mice coinjected with
pathogenic IgG and cromolyn was minimal (Fig. 4
A,
b and d). We also failed to see any significant
difference in total number of MCs and percentage of MC degranulation in
paired groups of mice (M
-sufficient vs M
-deficient group and
cromolyn-treated M
-sufficient vs cromolyn-treated M
-deficient
mice) across all time points (Fig. 4
B). These results
suggest that depletion of M
does not affect MC degranulation.
|
-deficient mice reconstituted with neutrophils become
susceptible to experimental BP either by i.d. injection of pathogenic
IgG plus 5 x 105 mouse neutrophils or i.d.
injection of pathogenic IgG plus IL-8. Twelve hours after IgG
injection, the injected M
-deficient mice (n = 5)
developed subepidermal blisters (Table I
-deficient
mice injected with IL-8 alone exhibited neutrophil infiltration in the
skin but no skin lesions (Table I
mainly participate in PMN recruitment in
experimental BP.
M
-mediated neutrophil recruitment is MC dependent
To determine whether M
-mediated neutrophil infiltration depends
on MCs, wild-type, MC-deficient, and M
-deficient mice with or
without pretreatment of carrageen or cromolyn were injected i.d. with
pathogenic IgG. Twelve hours later, neutrophil infiltration in the skin
of the injected animals was quantified by MPO assay. We found that
MC-deficient mice (n = 5) with and without M
depletion showed similar MPO activities (0.34 ± 0.04 for
untreated vs 0.39 ± 0.05 for carrageen-treated mice; Fig. 5
A). In contrast,
M
-deficient mice pretreated with cromolyn exhibited a significant
reduction in tissue MPO activity as compared with M
-deficient mice
without cromolyn treatment (0.68 ± 0.11 for untreated vs
0.30 ± 0.04 for cromolyn-treated, p < 0.01; Fig. 5
B). Thus, M
act downstream of MCs in the inflammatory
cascade in experimental BP.
|
| Discussion |
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, but not T
and B lymphocytes, are required for full expression of the disease
phenotype in experimental BP. We also established the relationship
between MCs and M
in the development of the cutaneous disease. MCs
play a major role in recruiting neutrophils, while M
amplify the
neutrophil infiltration in a MC-dependent fashion.
Based on immunohistological evidence, it has long been hypothesized
that anti-BMZ autoantibody-triggered subepidermal blister formation
in BP is mediated by inflammatory cells (43). Our previous
and current findings provide in vivo evidence that DEJ separation is
initiated by anti-BP180 IgG (25, 44) and dependent on
neutrophils (28), MCs (27), and M
(Fig. 2
). We have previously established a causal relationship between
neutrophil infiltration into the skin and subepidermal blistering in
experimental BP (28). Depletion of circulating neutrophils
completely abolishes the skin disease. Neutrophil elastase and
gelatinase B mediate BMZ tissue damage and DEJ separation (42, 45). We further showed that neutrophil recruitment triggered by
anti-BP180 Abs depends mainly on MCs (27).
MC-deficient mice are resistant to experimental BP and exhibit
70%
reduction of neutrophil infiltration into the skin.
The fact that MC deficiency does not totally impair neutrophil
recruitment in experimental BP suggests that there are at least two
neutrophil recruitment pathways, MC-dependent and MC-independent
pathways. Our present data show that M
are also involved in
anti-BP180 IgG-triggered neutrophil infiltration in mice. To
determine the functional relationship between MCs and M
in mediating
neutrophil infiltration, we first tested whether M
deficiency could
impair MC activation/degranulation. We found that 1) M
did not
affect MC degranulation (Fig. 4
); 2) MC-deficient mice and mice
deficient in both MCs and M
exhibit the same disease scores and
similar levels of neutrophils (Fig. 5
A); and 3) inhibition
of MC degranulation further reduced neutrophil infiltration in
M
-depleted mice (Fig. 5
B). Thus, MCs act upstream of M
in the inflammatory cascade in experimental BP.
MCs can produce a variety of inflammatory mediators such as
leukotrienes, platelet-activating factor, and cytokines that contribute
directly or indirectly to neutrophil recruitment (46, 47).
In fact, high levels of histamine, leukotriene B4, IL-1, -2, -5, -6,
and TNF-
are present in BP blister fluids (13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20). It
is likely that some of these mediators are released from MCs and are
involved in the recruitment of neutrophils directly by themselves and
indirectly by activating M
. Both activation and degranulation of MCs
are associated with matrix degradation (47). MC-specific
serine protease MCP-4 (chymase) also activates gelatinase B (48, 49). Therefore, MCs could also contribute to tissue damage in
experimental BP directly by cleaving structural proteins in the DEJ or
indirectly by activating gelatinase B. Similarly, M
are also capable
of releasing a variety of proinflammatory mediators, proteolytic
enzymes, and reactive oxygen species (50), and could
participate in either recruiting neutrophils or directly damaging BMZ.
How MCs regulate M
pathological functions in experimental BP is
currently under investigation.
Lymphocytes are found in the lesional/perilesional skin of human BP
(1) and the skin of experimental BP (25).
However, our data show that mice deficient in T cells and T and B cells
are susceptible to experimental BP, suggesting that these cells do not
participate, at least during the early stages of the disease induced by
passive transfer of pathogenic anti-BP180 IgG. Interestingly, T
cell-deficient mice show more infiltrating neutrophils in the dermis
and more severe disease activity relative to wild-type mice (Fig. 2
). T
cells contain
1-proteinase inhibitor, the physiological inhibitor of
neutrophil elastase (51). We have shown that
1-proteinase inhibitor is critical to the down-regulation of
subepidermal blistering (52). Therefore, infiltrating T
lymphocytes may secrete this inhibitor at the skin site to block
neutrophil elastase activity, which subsequently inhibits neutrophil
recruitment (44). It is also worth noticing that
eosinophils are absent in the lesional skin of mice during the first
24 h of blister development, although they are the predominant
cells in the inflammatory infiltrate in human BP. The difference in
predominant cell infiltration between human BP and mouse BP could be
due to the difference in their disease stages: skin biopsies of mouse
BP are obtained at 12 or 24 h post-IgG injection, while
most BP patient biopsies are obtained more than days or weeks after the
initial onset of clinical disease activity. In fact, eosinophils are
identified in the lesional skin of mouse BP when the mouse model is
maintained long term (>96 h; our unpublished observations). It
is also possible that eosinophils are not directly involved or play
only a secondary role in the initiation of human BP. Because a
pathogenic role of eosinophils in human BP remains to be proved, we
cannot rule out the possibility that there are critical differences in
the immunopathology between human and mouse BP. Whether eosinophils
play a role in the late stages of the disease process, e.g., wound
healing after tissue damage, needs further investigation.
In summary, this study provides direct evidence that M
, in
collaboration with MCs and neutrophils, are required for subepidermal
blistering in experimental BP and establishes a functional relationship
between these proinflammatory cells. These findings provide new
insights into the immunopathogenic mechanisms in BP and have
significant implications for therapeutic intervention for this
disease.
| Footnotes |
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2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Zhi Liu, Department of Dermatology, University of North Carolina, 3100 Thurston-Bowles, Chapel Hill, NC 27599. E-mail address: zhiliu{at}med.unc.edu ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: BP, bullous pemphigoid; BMZ, basement membrane zone; DEJ, dermal-epidermal junction; i.d., intradermal; IF, immunofluorescence; mBP180, murine BP180; MC, mast cell; M
, macrophage; MPO, myeloperoxidase; PMN, polymorphonuclear leukocyte. ![]()
Received for publication March 5, 2002. Accepted for publication July 26, 2002.
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2-antiplasmin complexes in skin blister fluid indicates plasmin generation in lesional skin. J. Clin. Invest. 92:978.
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2 microglobulin-deficient mice are resistant to bullous pemphigoid. J. Exp. Med. 186:777.
1-antitrypsin synthesis by human lymphocytes. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 104:1509.[Medline]
1-proteinase inhibitor is a critical substrate for gelatinase B/MMP-9 in vivo. Cell 102:647.[Medline]This article has been cited by other articles:
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M. Steinhoff, S. Stander, S. Seeliger, J. C. Ansel, M. Schmelz, and T. Luger Modern Aspects of Cutaneous Neurogenic Inflammation Arch Dermatol, November 1, 2003; 139(11): 1479 - 1488. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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