Publication | Open Access
Protective modulation of class II MHC gene expression in tubular epithelium by target antigen-specific antibodies. Cell-surface directed down-regulation of transcription can influence susceptibility to murine tubulointerstitial nephritis.
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1989
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Tubular EpitheliumRenal PathologyImmunologyImmune RegulationRenal InflammationPathologyProtective ModulationImmunologic MechanismAntigen ProcessingImmune SystemImmunotherapyImmune DysregulationInflammationGlomerulonephritisIga GlomerulonephritisImmunopathologyCell SignalingAutoimmune DiseaseAutoimmunityHumoral ImmunityClass Ii TranscriptionTarget Antigen-specific AntibodiesCell BiologyCellular Immune ResponseInterstitial LesionsMedicineInterstitial Nephritis
We have been studying the factors which permit autoimmune injury to the kidney leading to interstitial nephritis. Nonsusceptible mice develop L3T4+ effector T cells which do not recognize their 3M-1 target Ag, nor produce interstitial lesions in the kidney unless proximal tubular class II MHC Ag expression is increased, for example, by rIFN-gamma. Anti-tubular basement membrane/alpha 3M-1-Ab, normally present in such mice after immunization with 3M-1, produce an opposite result by diminishing class II transcription and expression. This unique antibody-ligand interaction on the surface of proximal tubular epithelium secreting 3M-1 serves as a novel protective regulatory response in interstitial parenchyma. The in vitro studies conveyed in this current report suggest that alpha 3M-1-Ab mediate this protective effect by reducing the transcription of mRNA encoding class II gene products. These findings, within the overall complexity of a nephritogenic immune response, demonstrate the important role certain elements may play in maintaining functional nonsusceptibility to autoimmune injury.