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Modulation of CNS autoimmune responses by CD8(+) T cells coincides with their oligoclonal expansion
ISSN
1872-8421
0165-5728
Date Issued
2016
Author(s)
Lingner, Thomas
Weishaupt, Andreas
DOI
10.1016/j.jneuroim.2015.10.020
Abstract
MS is a highly prevalent neuroinflammatory disease of presumed autoimmune origin. Clinical observations and animal studies suggest that CD8(+) T cells play an important role in MS but their exact mechanisms are ill defined. When we actively induced EAE in CD8 knock-out DA rats, or adoptively transferred encephalitogenic CD4(+) T cells into CD8 knock-out DA rats, the disease course was indistinguishable from controls. Since our previous findings had revealed that the absence of CD8(+) T cells in Lewis rats ameliorated EAE, we compared antigen-induced T cell differentiation in both strains. Disease onset and the composition of the draining lymph nodes were similar but T cell activation in DA rats was much weaker. Moreover, oligoclonal expansion of CD8(+) T cells was exclusively observed in Lewis but not in DA rats. This suggests that myelin-specific CD8(+) T cells are involved in the differentiation of encephalitogenic CD4(+) T cells in Lewis rats, whilst they do not impact CD4(+) T cell priming in DA rats. Hence, clonal expansion of CD8(+) T cells in secondary lymphoid organs appears to be linked to their ability to modulate CNS autoimmune responses. (C) 2015 Published by Elsevier B.V.