T cell-independent rescue of B lymphocytes from peripheral immune tolerance

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Autoimmunity arises when immune tolerance to specific self-antigens is broken. The mechanisms leading to such a failure remain poorly understood. One hypothesis proposes that infectious agents or antigens can break B or T lymphocyte self-tolerance by expressing epitopes that mimic self. Using a transgenic immunoglobulin model, we show that challenge with self-mimicking foreign antigen rescues B cells from peripheral tolerance independent of T cell help, resulting in the accumulation of self-reactive cells in the lymph nodes and secretion of immunoglobulins that bind to a liver-expressed self- antigen. Therefore, our studies reveal a potentially important mechanism by which B lymphocytes can escape self-tolerance.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2501-2503
Number of pages3
JournalScience
Volume287
Issue number5462
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 31 Mar 2000

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