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Multiple sclerosis is an autoimmune disease of the central nervous system characterized by inflammatory, demyelinating lesions and neuronal death. Formerly regarded as a variant of MS, neuromyelitis optica (NMO)/Devic’s disease is now recognized as a distinct neurological disorder exhibiting characteristic inflammatory and demyelinated foci in the optic nerves and the spinal cord sparing the brain. With the introduction of the double-transgenic “Devic mouse” model featuring spontaneous, adjuvant-free incidence of autoimmune neuroinflammation due to the interaction of transgenic MOG-specific T and B cells, a promising tool was found for the analysis of factors triggering or preventing autoimmunity. The co-inhibitory molecule B7-H1 has been proposed to contribute to the maintenance of peripheral tolerance and to confine autoimmune inflammatory damage via the PD-1/B7-H1 pathway. Compared to Devic B7-H1+/+ mice, Devic B7-H1-/- mice developed clinical symptoms with a remarkably higher incidence rate and faster kinetics emphasized by deteriorated disease courses and a nearly quadrupled mortality rate. Remarkably enlarged immune-cell accumulation in the CNS of Devic B7-H1-/- mice, in particular of activated MOG-specific CD4+ T cells, correlated with the more severe clinical features. Our studies showed that the CNS not only was the major site of myelin-specific CD4+ T-cell activation but also that B7-H1 expression within the target organ significantly influenced T-cell activation and differentiation levels. Analysis at disease maximum revealed augmented accumulation of MOG-specific CD4+ T cells in the peripheral lymphoid organs of Devic B7-H1-/- mice partly due to increased T-cell proliferation rates. Transgenic MOG-specific B cells of Devic B7-H1-/- mice activated MOG-specific CD4+ T cells more efficiently than B cells of Devic B7-H1+/+ mice. This observation indicated a relevant immune-modulating role of B7-H1 on APCs (antigen-presenting cells) in this mouse model. We also assumed altered thymic selection processes to be involved in increased peripheral CD4+ T-cell numbers of Devic B7-H1-/- mice as we found more thymocytes expressing the transgenic MOG-specific T-cell receptor (TCR). Moreover, preliminary in vitro experiments hinted on an enhanced survival of TCRMOG-transgenic CD4+ T cells of Devic B7-H1-/- mice; a mechanism that might as well have led to higher peripheral T-cell accumulation. Elevated levels of MOG-specific CD4+ T cells in the periphery of Devic B7-H1-/- mice could have entailed the higher quantities in the CNS. However, mechanisms such as CNS-specific proliferation and/or apoptosis/survival could also have contributed. This should be addressed in future investigations. Judging from in vitro migration assays and adoptive transfer experiments on RAG-1-/- recipient mice, migratory behavior of MOG-specific CD4+ T cells of Devic B7-H1+/+ and Devic B7-H1-/- mice seemed not to differ. However, enhanced expression of the transmigration-relevant integrin LFA-1 on CD4+ T cells in young symptom-free Devic B7-H1-/- mice might hint on temporally differently pronounced transmigration capacities during the disease course. Moreover, we attributed the earlier conversion of CD4+ T cells into Th1 effector cells in Devic B7-H1-/- mice during the initiation phase to the lack of co-inhibitory signaling via PD-1/B7-H1 possibly leading to an accelerated disease onset. Full blown autoimmune inflammatory processes could have masked these slight effects of B7-H1 in the clinical phase. Accordingly, at peak of the disease, Th1 and Th17 effector functions of peripheral CD4+ T cells were comparable in both mouse groups. Moreover, judging from titers of MOG-specific IgG1 and IgM antibodies, alterations in humoral immunity were not detected. Therefore, clinical differences could not be explained by altered T-cell or B-cell effector functions at disease maximum. B7-H1 rather seemed to take inhibitory effect in the periphery during the initiation phase only and consistently within the target organ by parenchymal expression. Our observations indicate that B7-H1 plays a relevant role in the regulation of T-cell responses in this mouse model for spontaneous CNS autoimmunity. By exerting immune-modulating effects in the preclinical as well as the clinical phase of the disease, B7-H1 contributed to the confinement of the immunopathological tissue damage in Devic B7-H1+/+ mice mirrored by later disease onsets and lower disease scores. As a model for spontaneous autoimmunity featuring a close to 100 % incidence rate, the Devic B7-H1-/- mouse may prove instrumental in clarifying disease-triggering and -limiting factors and in validating novel therapeutic approaches in the field of autoimmune neuroinflammation, in particular the human Devic’s disease.
Summary Myelin protein zero (P0) is a key myelin component in maintaining the integrity and functionality of the peripheral nervous system. Mutated variants are the cause for several disabilitating peripheral neuropathies such as Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease or Dejerine –Sotas syndrome. Using P0 knockout mice - a mouse model for these diseases - together with their wt counterparts on C57BL/6 background we studied the shaping of the T-cell repertoire specific for P0 in the presence and in the absence of this protein during the ontogeny of T-cells. Our approach was to use a series of overlapping 20-mer peptides covering the entire amino acid sequence of P0. This series of P0 peptides was employed for epitope mapping of the H2-Ab restricted T cell response. Thus, P0 peptide 5 (P0 41-60) in the extracellular domain of P0 was identified as the main immunogenic peptide. The immunogenic peptide containing the core immunodominant determinant in the P0 sequence was employed in studies of tolerance, revealing a highly reactive P0 specific T-cell repertoire in P0 ko mice while in wt mice the high avidity repertoire was inactivated in order to ensure self tolerance. In wild type and heterozygous P0 mice tolerance is not dependent on gene dosage. P0 is a tissue specific antigen whose expression is limited to myelinating Schwann cells. The classical view on tolerance to tissue specific antigens attributed this role to peripheral mechanisms. Driven by the finding that intrathymic expression of tissue-specific antigens is a common occurrence, we confirmed that “promiscuous” expression on thymic stroma holds true also for myelin P0. In addition, using bone marrow chimeras we investigated the capacity of bone marrow derived cells versus nonhematopoietic cells to induce tolerance towards P0. Our findings show that bone marrow derived cells although tolerogenic to some degree are not sufficient to mediate complete tolerance. P0 expression on cells with origin other than bone marrow showed to be sufficient and necessary to induce sound tolerance. We identified one cryptic (P0 peptide 8) and two subdominant epitopes (P0 petides 1, and 3). P0 peptide 8 was reactive in both wt and P0 ko mice. Peptides 1 and 3 were immunogenic in P0 ko but not in wt mice. Several P0 peptides including the immunogenic peptide 5 were involved in direct and adoptive transfer EAN studies. None of them induced clinical signs of EAN. Immunization with P0 peptide 3 did induce inflammation of the peripheral nerves reflected by the infiltration of macrophages and CD3 positive cells. More studies involving highly P0 specific T-cell lines are needed to characterize the P0 induced EAN. Our findings may have direct implications for secondary autoimmunity and inflammation in peripheral nerves developing after correcting the P0 genetic defect by gene therapy in aforementioned diseases.