|
|
||||||||



* Department of Biochemistry, Institute of Medical Biology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Tromsø, N-9037 Tromsø,
Department of Medical Genetics, University Hospital Northern Norway, N-9038 Tromsø,
Department of Genetics, Hematopoiesis Unit, Nikolaus Fiebiger Center for Molecular Medicine, University of Erlangen-Nurnberg, 91054 Erlangen, Germany,
Department of Rheumatology, University Hospital Northern Norway, N-9038 Tromsø, Norway
| Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Deriving from several studies during the last decade, there is increasing evidence that anti-dsDNA Abs are produced by cellular mechanisms similar to conventional anti-nonself Abs (6). This immune response is Th cell-dependent, associated with Ig class switch and affinity maturation secondary to prolonged stimulation with cognate Ags (i.e., complexes of DNA and proteins). The exact nature of the molecules or molecular complexes responsible for anti-dsDNA Ab production in vivo in SLE is not fully determined. Central candidate structures may be pure apoptotic nucleosomes (7, 8) potentially generated on background of altered chromatin degradation in context of defects in genes like those encoding DNase1 (9) or serum amyloid P (10). Alternatively, hetero-complexes of self nucleosomes and nonself DNA-binding proteins derived from bacteria or viruses may account for anti-DNA or anti-nucleosome Ab production (6, 11).
Previously, we have demonstrated that nucleosomes complexed with the polyomavirus-encoded DNA-binding protein large T-Ag have the potential to induce anti-DNA Abs (12, 13, 14). Because nucleosomes alone did not induce anti-dsDNA Abs or activated nucleosome-specific T cells in normal individuals (14, 15, 16), this directly demonstrated that nucleosomes were rendered immunogenic upon complex formation with T-Ag. This complex had the potential to stimulate DNA-specific B cells in a way analogous to a hapten (DNA/nucleosome)-carrier (T-Ag) complex.
In a clinical study, a highly significant correlation between productive polyomavirus infection and Ab production against T-Ag and dsDNA was observed (12, 13, 17). These results (discussed in Ref.6) suggested that an infectious nonself DNA-binding protein, when binding nucleosomal DNA in vivo, could create a molecular source responsible for initiating production of anti-DNA Abs, and also potentially for maintaining this immune response. This model is principally different from that implying that human anti-dsDNA Ab production can be initiated and sustained by autologous apoptotic nucleosomes (7, 8, 18). To study this model in more detail, we decided to develop T-Ag transgenic (tg) mice that may allow full control of expression of the transgenic protein and thereby to mimic expression profiles of the T-Ag similar to those observed in context of polyomavirus infection in human SLE (13)transient, sustained, or recurrent. Drug-inducible expression systems for transgenes have been developed. One such system using the Escherichia coli tetracycline (tet) resistance operon has been applied to tightly regulate gene expression in cell lines and in transgenic mice (19, 20, 21). Based on the tet-regulatory system, we established a binary inducible transgenic mouse model in which the conditional expression of T-Ag can be tightly regulated through application of tet. Two tet-regulated hybrid mice were selected for the planned experiments, tet-on or tet-off, where T-Ag expression is achieved by giving tet to the mice (tet-on) or after withdrawal from the mice (tet-off), respectively.
In this study, we examined if the tet-on- and/or tet-off-conditioned T-Ag tg mouse models are valid to investigate requirements for initiation and sustained production of anti-dsDNA Abs. Three basic aims were the focus for these studies. First, we analyzed whether control of T-Ag expression in tet-on and tet-off was tight. Second, experiments were performed that focused on whether T-Ag expression alone was sufficient to initiate anti-dsDNA Abs. Third, we examined whether anti-dsDNA Ab production, once initiated either by isolated T-Ag expression or after immunization with T-Ag and nucleosome-T-Ag complexes, could be maintained by sustained T-Ag expression.
Data presented here demonstrate that the tet-off system for regulation of T-Ag expression, but not that of tet-on, was tightly controlled, and in these mice, T cells responded both to immunization with T-Ag, and also to de novo expressed T-Ag. Sole in vivo T-Ag expression did not induce anti-dsDNA Abs but activated CD8+ T cells. Once initiated by immunization, however, subsequent in vivo expression of T-Ag maintained a remarkably stable anti-dsDNA Ab production and sustained activation of CD4+ T cells.
| Materials and Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The previously described plasmid pBSLT (12) was digested with NotI and SalI, and T-Ag full-length cDNA was isolated and subsequently cloned in the corresponding sites of the plasmid pTRE2 (Clontech Laboratories, Palo Alto, CA) to produce pTRE2-SLT. The pTRE2 plasmid contains a tetracycline-responsive TRE/CMV promoter. To generate tetracycline-responsive T-Ag transgenic mice, pTRE2-SLT was linearized with XhoI and XbaI, and the DNA fragment encompassing the TRE/CMV promoter with large T-Ag cDNA was thereafter purified. Injection in pronuclei of BALB/c-fertilized mouse eggs at the one-cell stage was performed by Johannes Wilbertz at the Karolinska Center for Transgene Technologies in Sweden. The transgenic mouse, on a FVB/n genetic background, containing tetracycline-controlled transcriptional activator (tTA), tet-off under control of the mouse major urinary protein promoter (MUP-tTA), was kindly provided by T. Jake Liang (National Institute of Health, Bethesda, MA) (19). The CMV-reverse tTA (rtTA), tet-on (NMRI outbred) mouse was kindly provided by Uwe Galli (University Hospital of Saarlandes, Homberg/Saar, Germany) with the generous approval of Hermann Bujard (University of Heidelberg, Germany) (22). Binary transgenic large T-Ag and CMV rtTA/T-Ag or MUP tTA/T-Ag mice, respectively, were obtained by crossing the transgenic T-Ag mouse with the CMV-rtTA or MUP-tTA transgenic mouse, respectively. The presence of tTA, rtTA, and T-Ag sequences in the double transgenic mice was verified by PCR. DNA was extracted from peripheral blood samples using Nucleon extraction and purification kit BACC1 (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, NJ). The primers used for these analyses are described in Table I. The CMV rtTA/T-Ag double transgenic mouse allowed inducible expression of T-Ag in the presence of tet (denoted tet-on mice), while T-Ag expression in the MUP tTA-T-Ag double transgenic mouse was turned on by the removal of tet (denoted tet-off mice). Tet was administrated through the drinking water to the binary CMV rtTA/T-Ag and MUP tTA/T-Ag tg mice in the form of doxycycline hyclate (BD Biosciences, Clontech), a derivative of tetracycline, and therefore denoted tet in this study. Tet was dissolved in water supplemented with 5% sucrose at a concentration of 200 µg/ml. The animals were housed in the Animal Research Department facilities at the Faculty of Medicine, University of Tromsø, treatment and care of the animals were in accordance with the guidelines of Norwegian Ethical and Welfare Board for Research Animals, and the study was approved by the Institutional Review Board.
|
RNA was isolated according to a protocol described by Vader et al. (23). The cDNA synthesis was performed with Superscript II RNase H reverse transcriptase kit for RT-PCR (Invitrogen, San Diego, CA), according to the manufacturers protocol. RT-PCR was performed using the T-Ag and adenine-phosphoribosyltransferase (APRT) encoding sequence-specific primers (Table I). The APRT primers were constructed to span two exons and one intron to separate genomic PCR products from those obtained from cDNA. This ensures that the T-Ag RT-PCR products amplified from tissue specimens were derived from cDNA.
Immune electron microscopy (IEM)
This was essentially done as described elsewhere (24, 25). Liver tissue was fixed by immersion in 8% formaldehyde in PBS, 2.3 M sucrose, and frozen on aluminum specimen pins by immersion in liquid nitrogen. Ultrathin sections were cut on a Reichert Ultracut S with a Reichert FCS cryochamber using a diamond knife (Drukker International, Cuijk, The Netherlands). Sections were thawed and mounted on Formvar-coated specimen grids before immunolabeling according to standard procedures. T-Ag expression was demonstrated using the mouse monoclonal anti-T-Ag Ab Ab-2 (Oncogene Research Products, Cambridge, MA), diluted 1/10 in PBS supplemented with 1% cold water fish skin gelatin (G-7765; Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) to block for nonspecific binding of Abs. A second rabbit anti-mouse IgG Ab (ICN/Chappel, Aurora, OH) was added, and binding was visualized by Protein A-gold (University of Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands). Every step was followed by washing in PBS, cold water fish skin gelatin. The grids were finally washed in distilled water and dried in 1.8% methylcellulose and 0.3% uranyl acetate. T-Ag-expressing SV-T2 (CCL 163.1; American Type Culture Collection, Manassas, VA) and nonexpressing A31 (CCL 163; American Type Culture Collection) cells were used as positive and negative controls, respectively. The specimens were examined in a Jeol 1010 transmission electron microscope (Tokyo, Japan).
Indirect immunofluorescence (IIF)
IIF was performed as described previously (26) on tissue cryosections from frozen liver samples. Sections were incubated with the anti-T-Ag Ab Ab-2 (diluted 1/10 in PBS, 1% albumin (PBSA)) and subsequently with Alexa Fluor 488-conjugated anti-mouse Fc
Abs (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR), diluted 1/500 in PBSA. After each Ab, the slides were washed in PBS. The specimens were analyzed using a LSM 510 Meta Zeiss confocal microscope.
Antigens
Nucleosomes and nucleosome-T-Ag complexes from the fibroblast cell lines A31 and the constitutively T-Ag-expressing SV-T2, respectively, were prepared from chromatin after cell lyses and micrococcal nuclease digestion, as described in detail elsewhere (14, 15). Characterization of the molecules and complexes used here revealed that the nucleosomes derived from A31 and SV-T2 cells, denoted nucleosomes and nucleosome-T-Ag complexes, respectively, had a nucleosomal DNA size spanning from
200 bp up to several thousand base pairs (14, 15). In contrast to nucleosomes from A31 cells, SV-T2 cell-derived nucleosomes also contained T-Ag at a T-Ag:nucleosomal DNA ratio of
0.5 (w/w), as determined earlier (14). Polyomavirus SV40 T-Ag was expressed in recombinant baculovirus, purified by affinity chromatography, and characterized by SDS-PAGE and Western blot using the anti-T-Ag Ab Ab-2 as previously described (14, 15). T-Ag was virtually pure and had a molecular mass of
90 kDa and some degradation products (14, 17). Human and calf thymus (CT) dsDNA (Sigma-Aldrich) were S1 nuclease digested as described previously (13, 27), while the circular cloning vector pUC18 (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) was used without further structural modifications as described in detail elsewhere (27). The DNA preparations were devoid of proteins according to Coomassie blue-stained SDS-polyacrylamide gels (data not shown). Histones (containing H1, H2A, H2B, H3, and H4) were obtained from Boehringer Mannheim (Mannheim, Germany), and methylated BSA (mBSA) from Sigma.
Immunization of groups of mice
Both tet-on and tet-off mice were divided into four groups, each consisting of three mice (Table II). group 1 served as a nonimmunized, T-Ag nonexpressing control group, while group 2 consisted of nonimmunized mice forced to express T-Ag. group 3 mice were first immunized subcutaneously with T-Ag (200 µg/ml) in CFA and 3 wk later with nucleosome-T-Ag complexes (200 µg/ml as DNA) in IFA without subsequent T-Ag expression. group 4 mice were immunized as group 3 and forced to express T-Ag
10 wk after the first immunization. See Table II for protocol and experimental details.
|
Each experimental group (tet-on groups 14 and tet-off groups 14), each consisting of three mice, were analyzed for the following immunological parameters (see Table II for experimental details). Cellular immune responses were analyzed in tet-on mice 12 wk (groups 1 and 2) or 36 wk (groups 3 and 4) after initiation of experimental immunization and/or T-Ag expression in vivo. For tet-off mice, cellular immune responses were determined 23 wk after initiation of the experiments for all groups of mice, if not otherwise stated in the text.
Humoral immune responses were measured over 12 (groups 1 and 2) or 36 wk (groups 3 and 4) for tet-on and over 23 wk for tet-off mice using serum samples drawn at 2- to 4-wk intervals, if not otherwise stated in the text. For some analyses, early and late serum specimens may not be included due to lack of sufficient amounts of those samples (see Fig. 4G for details)
|
Preparation of spleen or lymph node cells and stimulation with selected Ags was performed largely as described previously (17). The cells were cultured in Iscoves DMEM (Life Technologies Laboratories, Grand Island, NY) supplied with 25 mM HEPES buffer, 1x nonessential amino acids (Life Technologies), 2 mM L-glutamine, 100 U/ml penicillin/streptomycin, and 10% FCS (Sigma-Aldrich), in round-bottom 96-well culture plates. The T cells (5 x 105 cells as spleen or lymph node cells, in 200 µl medium/well) were sham-stimulated (medium) or stimulated with 10 µg/ml T-Ag, 15 µg/ml (as DNA) nucleosomes or nucleosome-T-Ag complexes, or 20 µg/ml histones (17). All experiments were performed in triplicate. The results are given as mean cpm (±SD), or as stimulation index (SI) defined as the ratio between mean cpm of Ag- and medium-stimulated T cells. In some experiments, mAbs against CD4 and CD8 molecules (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA), both at final concentrations of 10 µg/ml IgG, were added in parallel triplicate medium-, T-Ag-, or nucleosome-T-Ag-stimulated cultures. T cell proliferation was measured at day 3 after Ag stimulation in vitro, if not otherwise stated in the text, by [3H]thymidine (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) incorporation (1 µCi per well) as described previously (17).
Measurement of anti-T-Ag and anti-dsDNA Abs by ELISA or by solution-phase anti-dsDNA Ab ELISA (SPADE)
For detection and quantitation of Abs to T-Ag and CT dsDNA, standard indirect solid-phase ELISA was performed as described in detail previously (13, 28). To determine relative titers for each Ab specificity, the serum sample drawn at week 6 after the first immunization (3 wk after last boost injection with nucleosome-T-Ag complexes, see above) served as a reference serum for each individual mouse. The dilution of subsequently drawn serum samples giving 50% of maximum binding of the reference serum for a given Ab specificity (T-Ag or dsDNA) represented the relative titer of that serum Ab. By this approach, we could directly measure whether the Ab titers remained stable, increased, or decreased relative to expression of T-Ag. The SPADE assay measures Ab binding to DNA in solution using biotinylated DNA, as described in detail recently (27). In short, biotinylation of DNA was performed according to recommendations by the manufacturer (Pierce Chemical Company, Rockford, IL). Human dsDNA or circular pUC18 dsDNA (1 µg/µl in H2O) were mixed with equal volumes of EZ-Link photoactivable biotin (1 µg/µl H2O) on ice and irradiated for 3 min using a 275-W sun lamp at a distance of 8 cm from the light source. The biotinylated DNA molecules were subsequently purified by 2-butanol extraction and ethanol precipitation. SPADE was performed by mixing 0.5 µg of the biotinylated DNA molecules with 50 µl of serially diluted serum samples (1/201/160 in PBSA) (solution-phase step (27)). After incubation for 30 min, the mixtures were added to microtiter plates (Nunc MaxiSorp; Nunc, Roskilde, Denmark) coated overnight at 37°C with 50 µl of streptavidin (Sigma-Aldrich; 5 µg/ml in PBS). After incubation for 30 min, the plates were washed three times with PBS, 0.05% Tween 20 (PBST), and incubated for 1 h with HRP-conjugated anti-mouse Fc
Abs (Sigma-Aldrich), appropriately diluted in PBST. Subsequently, the ELISA was developed as described for the conventional ELISA (13, 28). For each biotinylated DNA, checkerboard titration, using serial dilutions of both sera and biotinylated DNA molecules, was performed to optimize the assay system (data not shown).
Statistics
Students t test was used to test for differences of means of groups, and a difference was regarded statistically significant at p < 0.05.
| Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
To test the inducible expression of T-Ag in the tet-on mice, 6-wk-old animals were administered either with water or water/sucrose supplemented with tet. T-Ag expression was monitored by IIF and IEM, and detection of the transcribed T-Ag encoding gene was done by RT-PCR. IEM with anti-T-Ag Abs demonstrated that T-Ag was expressed and localized to chromatin of constitutively T-Ag-expressing mouse SV-T2-positive control cells, but no T-Ag could be detected in the T-Ag nonexpressing A31-negative control cells (Fig. 1, A and B for SV-T2 and A31 cells, respectively). In the tet-on mice, T-Ag was expressed and localized to liver cell chromatin after tet administration (Fig. 1C), but also in the absence of tet exposure (Fig. 1D). Similarly, nuclear staining for T-Ag was observed by IIF in both tet-exposed and nonexposed mice (data not shown). Taken together, these results demonstrate that the tet-on mice were leaky as the T-Ag transgene was expressed even in the absence of tet. Consistent with this expression pattern, RT-PCR performed on liver and kidney mRNA demonstrated that T-Ag gene transcription was detectable in absence of tet (Fig. 1G, lanes 1 and 2 for liver and kidney mRNA, respectively).
|
Tet-on (CMV rtTA/T-Ag) mice are nonresponsive to immunization with T-Ag and nucleosome-T-Ag complexes as demonstrated by absence of Ab production and T cell proliferation
The tet-on mice did not produce anti-T-Ag or anti-ssDNA or anti-dsDNA Abs during the observation period, irrespective whether immunization with T-Ag and nucleosome-T-Ag complexes was followed by tet-induced T-Ag expression or not (data not shown, see Table II for experimental details), demonstrating that they were immunologically nonresponsive to T-Ag and DNA.
To test whether the absence of humoral immune responses after immunization could be due to nonresponsive T cells, spleen T cells taken from tet-on group 2 and tet-on group 4 mice were tested for proliferation in response to T-Ag and nucleosome-T-Ag complexes at the end of their respective observation periods. None of these mice contained T cells that proliferated above the levels of medium-stimulated T cells (Fig. 2, A and B for group 2 and group 4 mice, respectively). The inability of these tet-on mice to produce anti-T-Ag Abs and the nonresponsiveness of their T cells when stimulated ex vivo with T-Ag or nucleosome-T-Ag complexes (Fig. 2, A and B) is consistent with the observations that T-Ag is constitutively expressed in tet-on mice irrespective whether stimulated with tet or not (see Fig. 1, C and D). These results confirm that T-Ag expression is not controlled by the tet inducer in these mice, resulting in Ag-selective nonresponsiveness. This is further evident as tet-on mice that did not receive tet (i.e., mice not forced to express T-Ag) responded to immunization with mBSA by producing high titers of anti-mBSA Abs (data not shown), as previously observed in nonmanipulated BALB/c mice (29).
|
Tet-off mice were immunized with T-Ag and boosted with nucleosome-T-Ag complexes followed by activation of T-Ag expression. Four weeks thereafter, spleen or draining lymph node T cells were analyzed for their ability to proliferate to T-Ag or nucleosome-T-Ag complexes. As demonstrated in Fig. 2, C and D, both spleen- and lymph node-derived T cells responded similarly to stimulation with T-Ag and to nucleosome-T-Ag complexes. Autoimmune nucleosome-specific T cells could also be detected among lymph node T cells (Fig. 2D). This was further analyzed using spleen cells from all four experimental groups of tet-off mice (see below and Table III for details).
|
In mice immunized with T-Ag and boosted with nucleosome-T-Ag followed by expression of T-Ag (tet-off group 4), strong T cell responses to nucleosome-T-Ag were observed (Fig. 2H), while T cells possessed delayed and prolonged proliferative responses after medium-stimulation (Fig. 3A), becoming apparent at day 4 after initiation of the in vitro T cell cultures. The reason for this delayed proliferation after medium stimulation in this particular group of mice (Fig. 3A) is unclear, but was reproduced in several experiments using both spleen and draining lymph node T cells (data not shown). One explanation for this phenomenon may be proliferation of autoimmune, nucleosome-specific T cells in response to nucleosomes released in the cultures when cells start to die (see Discussion). This response could in separate experiments be inhibited by incubation of the medium-stimulated cultures with anti-CD4 Abs (73% inhibition) but only weakly with anti-CD8 Abs (33% inhibition, Fig. 3B). Such delayed and prolonged T cell responses have previously been demonstrated for T cells taken from patients with active SLE (14, 15).
|
Autoimmune T cell responses in tet-off group 14 (MUP tTA/T-Ag) mice
Linked presentation of T-Ag and nucleosome-derived (histone) peptides has been shown to terminate immunological tolerance to nucleosomes (6, 15, 17). We therefore analyzed spleen T cells for responsiveness to nucleosome-T-Ag complexes, nucleosomes, and histones in tet-off group 14 mice. Data presented in Table III demonstrate that mice expressing T-Ag have T cells that respond to mouse nucleosomes (SI: 2.1 and 2.2, for tet-off group 2 and 4 mice, respectively). None of the groups of mice had T cells responding significantly to pure histones.
Humoral immune responses to T-Ag and dsDNA in tet-off group 14 (MUP tTA/T-Ag) mice
Nonimmunized and T-Ag nonexpressing tet-off group 1 mice did not produce Abs to T-Ag or to dsDNA over the observation period (Fig. 4A). The same negative result was observed for nonimmunized tet-off group 2 mice forced to express T-Ag (Fig. 4B). These data are consistent with the absence of T cell responses in tet-off group 1 mice (Fig. 2E) or presence of nucleosome-T-Ag-responsive T cells mainly of the CD8 phenotype in tet-off group 2 mice (Figs. 2F and 3C).
In contrast, mice immunized with T-Ag and boosted with nucleosome-T-Ag complexes produced Abs to dsDNA (Fig. 4, C and D for tet-off group 3, and Fig. 4, E and F for tet-off group 4 mice, respectively) and to T-Ag (Fig. 4G for tet-off group 3 and 4 mice). To examine whether there are differences between tet-off group 3 and group 4 mice with respect to sustained Ab production, titers of anti-T-Ag and anti-dsDNA Abs were determined in these two groups of mice (see Figs. 4, CG for details). As is evident, titers for anti-dsDNA Abs declined in tet-off group 3 mice (Fig. 4, C and D) from a mean titer of 963 (week 6) to 368 (week 23), and anti-T-Ag titers declined from 318 (at week 10) to 241 (week 18) (Fig. 4G). In tet-off group 4 mice, however, the anti-dsDNA and anti-T-Ag Ab titers remained stable over the observation periods (mean titers for anti-dsDNA Abs were 1657 (week 6) and 1518 (week 23) (Fig. 4, E and F) and for anti-T-Ag Abs 463 (week 10) and 510 (week 18), respectively (Fig. 4G)). For anti-dsDNA Abs, there was a significant drop in Ab titers in tet-off group 3 mice at week 16 and thereafter compared with titers in tet-off group 4 mice (p < 0.04 at week 16 and p < 0.001 at week 23). Unfortunately, due to lack of sufficient amounts of early and late serum samples, the initial titers of anti-T-Ag Abs could not be determined, and titer variations following week 6 for the anti-T-Ag Ab titers were therefore unknown. In one mouse, however, this could be determined (mouse 3 of tet-off group 3), and the anti-T-Ag Ab titer declined from 760 (week 6) to 185 (week 23). This is similar to the transient nature of anti-T-Ag Abs observed among SLE patients in which polyomavirus infection occasionally is terminated (13). Statistical calculations for differences between the groups with respect to anti-T-Ag Ab titers were therefore not performed.
Quality of the anti-dsDNA Abs produced by tet-off (MUP tTA/T-Ag) group 3 and group 4 mice
The properties of anti-DNA Abs produced in the tet-off groups 3 and 4 mice were further analyzed to determine whether they developed sufficient avidity to bind dsDNA, not only in solid-phase dsDNA ELISA, but also in solution. For such studies, we used soluble biotinylated circular pUC18 and linear human dsDNA as Ags (27). Furthermore, we searched for evidence that a prolonged immune response (as in tet-off group 4 mice (Fig. 4F)) resulted in Abs with sufficient avidity to bind e.g., circular pUC18 plasmid dsDNA in solution (27), as compared with early Abs in immunized T-Ag nonexpressing tet-off group 3 mice. By comparing anti-DNA Abs of each individual mouse in tet-off group 3 (Fig. 5A, sera drawn at week 6) and tet-off group 4 (Fig. 5B, sera drawn at week 23), Abs from all mice-bound CT dsDNA in solid-phase ELISA, and human dsDNA in SPADE. More importantly, all mice of tet-off groups 3 and 4 bound circular pUC18 dsDNA in solution (Fig. 5, A and B) at titers similar to those recently published for human SLE (27). Some of these tet-off group 3 and 4 Abs also bound in the Crithidia luciliae assay (data not shown), previously demonstrated to correlate with binding in pUC18 SPADE (27). Thus, the anti-dsDNA Ab responses in immunized T-Ag nonexpressing and T-Ag-expressing mice possessed sufficient avidity to bind stringent dsDNA structures in solution, requiring higher avidity than in solid-phase ELISA (30).
|
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
To investigate the question, whether a de novo-expressed nuclear (auto) Ag is able to initiate and maintain an anti-DNA Ab response in nonautoimmune mice, we developed an experimental animal model in which the expression of SV40 large T-Ag is under stringent control in vivo. There are several aspects that needed to be analyzed to validate the T-Ag tg mouse model for studies of DNA and nucleosome tolerance regulation: How tight is the T-Ag expression regulated in tet-on compared with the tet-off mice; is the Ag-specific immune system responsive or tolerized; what is the CD4/CD8 phenotype of the T cells that eventually are stimulated as a consequence of gene expression or after immunization before gene expression? An important aspect was to investigate whether anti-T-Ag and/or anti-dsDNA Ab production could be maintained by T-Ag expression once their production had been initiated by immunization. Secondary to this latter point, we also investigated the ability of the induced anti-dsDNA Abs to recognize at sufficiently high-avidity linear and circular dsDNA in solution-phase ELISA in immunized mice expressing vs not expressing T-Ag over time.
By different analytical approaches, immunofluorescence or immune electronmicroscopy on liver sections and RT-PCR to detect T-Ag gene transcripts, we observed that the tet-on tg system was not tightly regulated, and T-Ag was expressed irrespective whether the gene was activated by tet or not. This is particularly evident because T-Ag localizes to liver cell chromatin due to its nuclear localization signal and high avidity for chromatin (36), making it easy to detect expressed T-Ag by e.g., IIF and IEM.
In accordance with the tendency for spontaneous T-Ag expression in the tet-on mice, these were nonresponsive to T-Ag as demonstrated by absence of T-Ag-induced T cell proliferation and Ab production after experimental immunization with T-Ag and nucleosome-T-Ag complexes. This is consistent with earlier observations demonstrating that the tet-on system in other contexts may be leaky (38, 39, 40) but in contrast to observations obtained by Kistner et al. (22), who demonstrated no expression above background of the luciferase transgene in transgenic mice with a tet-inducible transactivator system in the absence of tet. Increased residual expression of T-Ag in our rtTA/T-Ag tet-on mice in the absence of tet may be explained by the site of chromosomal integration of the T-Ag transgene. This is consistent with earlier observations that unregulated basal transcription of the integrated transgene driven by promoters activated by tetracycline may result from unsuitable chromosomal integration of the transgene (41).
In contrast to these results, T-Ag expression in the tet-off system was demonstrated to be tightly controlled as determined by negative IIF, IEM, and RT-PCR assays for T-Ag detection and expression in presence of tet. However, withdrawal of tet from the drinking water of these mice activated the T-Ag-encoding gene, and both T-Ag mRNA, and nuclear localized T-Ag in liver cells could be detected, similar to what has been described by Manickan et al. (19). Because both systems use the same T-Ag tg mouse, the tTA/T-Ag system must be more effective than the rtTA/T-Ag system in controlling T-Ag expression (see Results). In these tet-off mice, T-Ag expression without preceding immunization with T-Ag and nucleosome-T-Ag-activated CD8+ nucleosome-T-Ag-specific T cells but no Ab production. Immunization of the mice with T-Ag and nucleosome-T-Ag complexes before induced T-Ag expression, however, resulted in activation of CD4+ T cells and anti-T-Ag and anti-dsDNA Ab production. The activated T cells did not significantly respond to isolated T-Ag, but to nucleosome-T-Ag complexes and also weakly to nucleosomes (see Fig. 2 and Table III). This may indicate that the activated T cells recognize nucleosome-bound T-Ag-derived peptides, but not peptides derived from isolated T-Ag, equivalent to a similar phenomenon previously published (17). In that work we demonstrated that monoclonal T cell lines generated from mice immunized with free T-Ag proliferated to free T-Ag, but not to T-Ag complexed with nucleosomes (17). In analogy to this, long-term T-Ag expression in the tet-off mice and subsequent in vivo nucleosome-T-Ag complex formation may well have resulted in selection of T cells specific for that complex, and, although not formally proven, with a specificity for nucleosome-bound T-Ag-derived peptides that may differ from peptides generated from noncomplexed T-Ag (17).
The CD8/CD4 dichotomy of the T cell responses is in agreement with T cells activated by endogenously produced nonself proteins presented in context of MHC class I molecules after isolated T-Ag expression, while prior immunization directed the T cell phenotype toward a MHC class II-T-Ag-peptide complex-dependent CD4+ T cell response. It is, however, unexpected that a soluble Ag or an antigenic complex given to the in vitro cell culture stimulates CD8+ T cells primed in vivo by de novo expression of T-Ag as demonstrated here (see Fig. 3 for examples). However, it has been demonstrated that soluble Ags taken up by APC may be presented by MHC class I molecules and thus stimulate CD8+ T cells (discussed in Ref.42).
These results demonstrated that the binary tet-off tg system proved useful to investigate in more detail requirements for both induction and sustained production of anti-dsDNA Abs, and also for regulation of T cell tolerance to nucleosomes.
In the tet-off mice, production of anti-dsDNA Abs could be maintained by sole T-Ag expression after prior immunization with T-Ag and nucleosome-T-Ag complexes, while in immunized T-Ag nonexpressing mice, Abs to dsDNA declined. The titers of the Abs determined in solid-phase (conventional anti-dsDNA ELISA) and in solution-phase anti-DNA ELISA (SPADE) using linear and circular dsDNA molecules, compared well with those currently determined in autoimmune (NZBxW)F1 mice (manuscript in preparation), and with those determined by the same solid- and solution-phase assays recently published for human SLE-derived anti-dsDNA Abs (27), which differ significantly from the much higher titers reported for Abs to nonself proteins or to Z DNA, as discussed by Stollar (43). The results of these experiments directly demonstrated that T-Ag expression initiated a process that resulted in continuous stimulation of autoimmune dsDNA-specific B cells, most probably due to release of heterologous nucleosome-T-Ag complexes able to initiate cognate interaction between DNA-specific B cells and T-Ag-specific T cells (13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 44). The exact process involved in release of nucleosome-T-Ag complexes after expression of T-Ag is not fully determined, but may be caused by cytotoxic CD8+ T cells activated in context of T-Ag expression.
The sustained anti-dsDNA Ab production in tet-off group 4 mice may depend on CD4+ Th cells specific for the T-Ag component of the nucleosome-T-Ag complex (14) and not necessarily on autoimmune nucleosome-specific T cells. However, activation of nucleosome-specific T cells have directly been demonstrated in tet-off group 2 and 4 mice (see Table III for details). In both these situations, T-Ag is expressed and binds chromatin. If such cells die, nucleosome-T-Ag complexes are released from the cells. When taken up by an APC, this implies linked presentation of T-Ag and e.g., histone-derived peptides. Provided T cells specific for T-Ag-derived peptides respond, these may indirectly activate autoimmune nucleosome-specific T cells by IL-2 released by such activated T cells. This scenario is consistent with previously published data (15, 16, 45). One observation obtained in tet-off group 4 mice may relate to presence of in vivo-activated autoimmune nucleosome-specific T cells. In this group of mice, more pronounced than in tet-off group 2 mice (Fig. 3A), we consistently observed delayed CD4+ T cell proliferation in medium-stimulated T cell cultures. This response may be explained by stimulation by autologous nucleosomes released from dying cells in the cultures. The delayed response would be consistent with the time needed to release sufficient amounts of nucleosomes to stimulate autoimmune nucleosome-specific T cells that evidently are activated in vivo in these mice (Fig. 2D and Table III).
Whether activated nucleosome-specific T cells may be maintained in vivo by autologous nucleosomes in absence of expressed T-Ag is currently under investigation by testing whether CD4+ autoimmune T cells activated by long-term T-Ag expression can be maintained by subsequent immunization with pure nucleosomes after terminating expression of T-Ag (experiments in progress). The results of the present study validate the tet-off model as useful for such experimental protocols. Furthermore, this tet-off conditioned transgenic system may have perspectives far beyond the focus of this study, allowing studies in general on the impact of infectious-derived proteins on regulation of tolerance to self constituents in context of infections.
Two independent sets of evidences have been presented that demonstrated a biological relevance for the binary tet-regulated T-Ag tg model described here. First, mice inoculated with T-Ag-expressing plasmids produced (transient) Abs to T-Ag and dsDNA, but also to the DNA-binding eukaryotic transcription factors TATA-binding protein (TBP) and cAMP-response-element-binding protein (CREB) (12, 13). In a prospective clinical study of 20 SLE patients followed over 1 year, a mirror image of these experimental results were obtained. Both within and among these SLE patients, sustained productive polyomavirus infection was the most prominent observation (13). Linked to this infection profile, Abs to T-Ag, dsDNA, TBP, and CREB were detected, identical with what we observed in T-Ag plasmid-inoculated mice (12, 13). In a cross-sectional study on healthy individuals, SLE, and related autoimmune syndromes, a strong and statistically highly significant correlation between Abs to dsDNA and T-Ag was noted (28). Those results strongly indicated that cognate interaction of B cells recognizing DNA or DNA-associated autologous proteins (e.g., histones, TBP or CREB) and T cells recognizing T-Ag had taken place as a consequence of complex formation between T-Ag and DNA/nucleosomes in vivo in the context of polyomavirus reactivations. In subsequent studies, T-Ag-specific T cells possessed the potential to proliferate when stimulated with T-Ag or T-Ag complexed with nucleosomes in vitro. In the presence of T-Ag complexed with nucleosomes, activated T-Ag-specific T cells provided help, probably by secreted IL-2 (Ref.45 , and references therein), to terminate nucleosome-specific T cell anergy. The latter T cells progressed into functional, autoimmune T cells if nucleosome-derived, autologous peptides were properly presented by the same APC (a situation consistent with determinant spreading) (6, 16). Both classes of T cells, either immune or autoimmune, may provide help for dsDNA-specific B cells to produce nephritogenic anti-dsDNA Abs (reviewed in Ref.6).
In conclusion, the present experiments and observations demonstrate that the tet-off system described here is sufficiently controlling T-Ag expression to avoid T-Ag- and nucleosome-related T cell nonresponsiveness. In these mice, sustained anti-dsDNA and anti-T-Ag Ab production could be achieved by constitutive expression of T-Ag once the Ab production was induced by immunization with T-Ag followed by nucleosome-T-Ag complexes. Based on present and previous experimental and prospective clinical results (6, 14, 15, 16, 17, 28), this experimental system opens for further studies to describe molecular and cellular processes that are operational in both induction and sustained production of potentially pathogenic Abs to dsDNA or nucleosomes, representing important disease-modifying factors in syndromes like SLE.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
1 This work was supported by grants from the Norwegian Research Council (Grant 141845/310) and from "Norske Kvinners Sanitetsforening". ![]()
2 S.B. and M.V.G. contributed equally to this work. ![]()
3 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Ole Petter Rekvig, Department of Biochemistry, Institute of Medical Biology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Tromsø, N-9037 Tromsø, Norway. E-mail address: olepr{at}fagmed.uit.no ![]()
4 Abbreviations used in this paper: SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus; CT, calf thymus; mBSA, methylated bovine serum albumin; rtTA, reverse tetracycline-controlled transcriptional activator; T-Ag, polyomavirus T antigen; tet, tetracycline; tg, transgene; tTA, tetracycline-controlled transcriptional activator; APRT, adenine-phosphoribosyltransferase; IEM, immune electron microscopy; IIF, indirect immunofluorescence; SI, stimulation index; SPADE, solution-phase anti-dsDNA Ab ELISA; TBP, TATA-binding protein; CREB, cAMP-response-element-binding protein. ![]()
Received for publication July 12, 2004. Accepted for publication September 30, 2004.
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
S Fismen, A Hedberg, K. Fenton, S Jacobsen, E Krarup, A. Kamper, O. Rekvig, and E. Mortensen Circulating chromatin-anti-chromatin antibody complexes bind with high affinity to dermo-epidermal structures in murine and human lupus nephritis Lupus, June 1, 2009; 18(7): 597 - 607. [Abstract] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
E. S. Mortensen and O. P. Rekvig Nephritogenic Potential of Anti-DNA Antibodies against Necrotic Nucleosomes J. Am. Soc. Nephrol., April 1, 2009; 20(4): 696 - 704. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
E. S. Mortensen, K. A. Fenton, and O. P. Rekvig Lupus Nephritis: The Central Role of Nucleosomes Revealed Am. J. Pathol., February 1, 2008; 172(2): 275 - 283. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
J E Mjelle, O P Rekvig, and K A Fenton Nucleosomes possess a high affinity for glomerular laminin and collagen IV and bind nephritogenic antibodies in murine lupus-like nephritis Ann Rheum Dis, December 1, 2007; 66(12): 1661 - 1668. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. Kalaaji, E. Mortensen, L. Jorgensen, R. Olsen, and O. P. Rekvig Nephritogenic Lupus Antibodies Recognize Glomerular Basement Membrane-Associated Chromatin Fragments Released from Apoptotic Intraglomerular Cells Am. J. Pathol., June 1, 2006; 168(6): 1779 - 1792. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |