Up-regulation of glomerular extracellular matrix and transforming growth factor-beta expression in RF/J mice. (1/293)

BACKGROUND: RF/J mice were first reported as a murine model of spontaneous glomerulosclerosis by Gude and Lupton in 1960, but the precise histologic characteristics and immunopathological background of this mouse have not been investigated further. METHODS: Measurements of serum levels of immunoglobulins, anti-single strand DNA (anti-ss-DNA) antibody, complement (C3), and circulating immune complex (IC) were performed. Analyses of glomerular histological and immunopathological lesions in association with the detection of mRNA expression of collagen IV, TGF-beta, matrix protein turnover related enzymes, matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2), tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-2 (TIMP-2) and platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) were also performed in young (10-week-old) and elderly (60-week-old) RF/J mice with age-matched BALB/C mice as the controls. RESULTS: High levels of serum IgA and IgG from as early as 20 weeks of age were noted in the RF/J mice. Serum anti-ss-DNA antibody of aged RF/J mice increased up to 23% of that of aged MRL-lpr/lpr mice, and serum C3 concentration significantly decreased with age, reaching lower levels than that of BALB/c mice. IgA-IC levels were significantly high compared to BALB/C mice both in the early and late stages of life, whereas IgG-IC levels were high only in mice younger than 20 weeks. Semiquantitative and quantitative analyzes of renal histopathological findings revealed significantly marked and age-related mesangial matrix expansion in RF/J mice, with increasing frequency of global glomerular sclerosis and tubulointerstitial damage. On the other hand, although precise measurements of glomerular cell numbers also showed an apparent augmentation in both young and old RF/J mice compared to BALB/C mice, glomerular cellularity decreased with age in RF/J mice. Immunohistochemical study revealed massive immunoglobulin deposition from a young age in association with significantly higher accumulation of matrix proteins, such as types I and IV collagen and laminin from the early stage of life. In addition, in these glomeruli, transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) was highly expressed both in young and old mice. The mRNA expression of MMP-2 was up-regulated only in the early stage of life. Although PDGF mRNA of RF/J mice was significantly up-regulated in the early stage of life, the differences between the mice disappeared in the late stage of life. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that in RF/J mice, an immunopathological background inducing high serum immunoglobulin and IC levels from the early stage of life is closely related to mesangioproliferative glomerular lesions mediated by PDGF, and that development of massive extracellular matrix accumulation in glomeruli was induced by up-regulated expression of TGF-beta with inappropriate regulation of protein turnover-related enzyme production.  (+info)

Disparate T cell requirements of two subsets of lupus-specific autoantibodies in pristane-treated mice. (2/293)

Intraperitoneal injection of pristane induces a lupus-like disease in BALB/c and other non-autoimmune mice characterized by autoantibody production and the development of immune complex disease closely resembling lupus nephritis. Two subsets of autoantibodies are induced by pristane: IgG anti-DNA DNA and -chromatin autoantibodies are strongly IL-6-dependent, whereas IgG anti-nRNP/Sm and -Su antibodies are not. The present studies were carried out to examine the role of T cells in establishing this dichotomy between the production of anti-nRNP/Sm/Su versus anti-DNA/chromatin autoantibodies. Autoantibody production and renal disease were evaluated in athymic (nude) mice treated with pristane. BALB/c nu/nu mice spontaneously developed IgM and IgG anti-single-stranded (ss)DNA and -chromatin, but not anti-nRNP/Sm or -Su, autoantibodies. Pristane treatment increased the levels of IgG anti-chromatin antibodies in nu/nu mice, but did not induce production of anti-nRNP/Sm or -Su antibodies. In contrast, BALB/c nu/+ and +/+ control mice did not spontaneously produce autoantibodies, whereas anti-nRNP/Sm and -Su autoantibodies were induced by pristane in approx. 50% of nu/+ and +/+ mice and anti-DNA/chromatin antibodies at lower frequencies. Nude mice spontaneously developed mild renal lesions that were marginally affected by pristane, but were generally milder than the lesions developing in pristane-treated nu/+ and +/+ mice. The data provide further evidence that two distinct pathways with different cytokine and T cell requirements are involved in autoantibody formation in pristane-induced lupus. This dichotomy may be relevant to understanding differences in the regulation of anti-DNA versus anti-nRNP/Sm autoantibodies in systemic lupus erythematosus, as well as the association of anti-DNA, but not anti-nRNP/Sm, with lupus nephritis.  (+info)

Endothelial targeting and enhanced antiinflammatory effects of complement inhibitors possessing sialyl Lewisx moieties. (3/293)

The complement inhibitor soluble complement receptor type 1 (sCR1) and a truncated form of sCR1, sCR1[desLHR-A], have been generated with expression of the selectin-reactive oligosaccharide moiety, sialyl Lewisx (sLex), as N-linked oligosaccharide adducts. These modified proteins, sCR1sLex and sCR1[desLHR-A]sLex, were assessed in the L-selectin- and P-selectin-dependent rat model of lung injury following systemic activation of complement by cobra venom factor and in the L-selectin-, P-selectin-, and E-selectin-dependent model of lung injury following intrapulmonary deposition of IgG immune complexes. In the cobra venom factor model, sCR1sLex and sCR1[desLHR-A]sLex caused substantially greater reductions in neutrophil accumulation and in albumin extravasation in lung when compared with the non-sLex-decorated forms. In this model, increased lung vascular binding of sCR1sLex and sCR1[desLHR-A]sLex occurred in a P-selectin-dependent manner, in contrast to the absence of any increased binding of sCR1 or sCR1[desLHR-A]. In the IgG immune complex model, sCR1[desLHR-A]sLex possessed greater protective effects relative to sCR1[desLHR-A], based on albumin extravasation and neutrophil accumulation. Enhanced protective effects correlated with greater lung vascular binding of sCR1[desLHR-A]sLex as compared with the non-sLex-decorated form. In TNF-alpha-activated HUVEC, substantial in vitro binding occurred with sCR1[desLHR-A]sLex (but not with sCR1[desLHR-A]). This endothelial cell binding was blocked by anti-E-selectin but not by anti-P-selectin. These data suggest that sLex-decorated complement inhibitors have enhanced antiinflammatory effects and appear to have enhanced ability to localize to the activated vascular endothelium.  (+info)

Regulation of monocyte survival in vitro by deposited IgG: role of macrophage colony-stimulating factor. (4/293)

IgG deposition at tissue sites characteristically leads to macrophage accumulation and organ injury. Although the mechanism by which deposited IgG induces tissue injury is not known, we have recently demonstrated that deposited IgG stimulates the release of IL-8 and monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 from normal human monocytes, which may drive inflammation. Since IgG also induces macrophage accumulation in these diseases, we hypothesized that deposited IgG protects monocytes from apoptosis. As an in vitro model of the effect of deposited IgG on monocyte survival, monocyte apoptosis was studied after FcgammaR cross-linking. Monocytes cultured on immobilized IgG, which induces FcgammaR cross-linking, were protected from apoptosis, whereas monocytes cultured with equivalent concentrations of F(ab')2 IgG or 50 times higher concentrations of soluble IgG, neither of which induces FcgammaR cross-linking, were not protected. Moreover, this protection was transferable, as supernatants from immobilized IgG-stimulated monocytes protected freshly isolated monocytes from apoptosis and contained functional M-CSF, a known monocyte survival factor. M-CSF mediated the monocyte survival induced by FcgammaR cross-linking, as neutralizing anti-human M-CSF Abs blocked the monocyte protection provided by either immobilized IgG or IgG-stimulated monocyte supernatants. These findings demonstrate a novel mechanism by which deposited IgG targets tissue macrophage accumulation through FcgammaR-mediated M-CSF release. This pathway may play an important role in promoting and potentiating IgG-mediated tissue injury.  (+info)

Failure to induce anti-glomerular basement membrane glomerulonephritis in TNF alpha/beta deficient mice. (5/293)

TNF is a key proinflammatory cytokine playing a central role in the expression of endothelial adhesion molecules required for the recruitment of inflammatory cells. Proliferative glomerulonephritis induced by anti-GBM antibody is characterized by the recruitment of inflammatory cells into the glomerulus and capillary damage followed by regeneration with crescent formation. The glomerular pathology may be due to TNF induction and we therefore tested this hypothesis in TNF alpha/beta deficient mice. Anti-GBM antibody administration in sensitised wild-type mice resulted in deposition of immune complexes and complement factor 3, followed by increased ICAM-1 and VCAM-1 expression and influx of polymorphonuclear leucocytes. Distinct proteinuria precedes proliferative glomerulonephritis with glomerular crescent formation, which is fully developed at 10 days. By contrast, no glomerulonephritis developed in TNF alpha/beta deficient mice. Comparable antibody complex deposits are found, but the upregulation of ICAM-1 and VCAM-1, the influx of inflammatory cells and the subsequent tissue damage is absent in TNF alpha/beta deficient mice. Therefore, we conclude that TNF plays a key role for the recruitment of inflammatory cells by preventing the upregulation of endothelial adhesion molecule and the subsequent development of proliferative glomerulonephritis.  (+info)

Synergistic enhancement of chemokine generation and lung injury by C5a or the membrane attack complex of complement. (6/293)

Complement plays an important role in many acute inflammatory responses. In the current studies it was demonstrated that, in the presence of either C5a or sublytic forms of the complement-derived membrane attack complex (MAC), rat alveolar macrophages costimulated with IgG immune complexes demonstrated synergistic production of C-X-C (macrophage inflammatory protein-2 and cytokine-induced neutrophil chemoattractant) and C-C (macrophage inflammatory protein-1alpha and monocyte chemoattractant-1) chemokines. In the absence of the costimulus, C5a or MAC did not induce chemokine generation. In in vivo studies, C5a and MAC alone caused limited or no intrapulmonary generation of chemokines, but in the presence of a costimulus (IgG immune complexes) C5a and MAC caused synergistic intrapulmonary generation of C-X-C and C-C chemokines but not of tumor necrosis factor alpha. Under these conditions increased neutrophil accumulation occurred, as did lung injury. These observations suggest that C5a and MAC function synergistically with a costimulus to enhance chemokine generation and the intensity of the lung inflammatory response.  (+info)

Selection of a C5a receptor antagonist from phage libraries attenuating the inflammatory response in immune complex disease and ischemia/reperfusion injury. (7/293)

A C5a-receptor antagonist was selected from human C5a phage display libraries in which the C terminus of des-Arg74-hC5a was mutated. The selected molecule is a competitive C5a receptor antagonist in vitro and in vivo. Signal transduction is interrupted at the level of G-protein activation. In addition, the antagonist does not cause any C5a receptor phosphorylation. Proinflammatory properties such as chemotaxis or lysosomal enzyme release of differentiated U937 cells, as well as C5a-induced changes in intracellular Ca2+ concentration of murine peritoneal macrophages, are inhibited. The in vivo efficacy was evaluated in three different animal models of immune complex diseases in mice, i.e., the reverse passive Arthus reaction in the peritoneum, skin, and lung. The i.v. application of the C5a receptor antagonist abrogated polymorphonuclear neutrophil accumulation in peritoneum and markedly attenuated polymorphonuclear neutrophil migration into the skin and the lung. In a model of intestinal ischemia/reperfusion injury, i.v. administration of the C5a receptor antagonist decreased local and remote tissue injury: bowel wall edema and hemorrhage as well as pulmonary microvascular dysfunction. These data give evidence that C5a is an important mediator triggering the inflammatory sequelae seen in immune complex diseases and ischemia/reperfusion injury. The selected C5a receptor antagonist may prove useful to attenuate the inflammatory response in these disorders.  (+info)

Altered distribution of intraglomerular immune complexes in C3-deficient mice. (8/293)

We have studied the role of complement in a model of glomerular inflammation induced by the in situ formation of immune complexes along the glomerular basement membrane. In C3-deficient mice, produced by homologous recombination, immune complex formation occurs initially in the subendothelial site and progresses slowly to the subepithelial position, whereas wild-type mice do not develop subendothelial deposits. In addition, the accumulation of electron-dense deposits is greater in the complement-deficient mice. Complement therefore influences glomerular handling of immune complexes, possibly because of changes in the physiochemical characteristics of the immune complexes. However, despite evidence of complement activation in the wild-type mice, as demonstrated by immunohistochemical detection of C3, C4 and C9, the degree of proteinuria was similar in C3-deficient mice. We conclude that, although complement is required for the normal glomerular metabolism of immune complexes, other, complement-independent, factors are involved in the generation of glomerular injury in this model.  (+info)