Autoimmune diseases develop when self-specific T cells that escaped negative selection initiate a harmful immune response against self. However, factors, which influence the initiation and progression of an autoimmune response remain incompletely understood. By establishing a double-transgenic BALB/c mouse system in which different amounts of a cell-surface neo-self-antigen are expressed under the CD11c promoter, we demonstrate that antigen dose dramatically influences T-cell tolerance mechanisms. Moderate antigen expression in both hematopoietic and nonhematopoietic cells favors the development of antigen-specific Treg cells and the establishment of a tolerogenic environment. In marked contrast, a high dose of antigen expression results in very stringent negative selection, in poor development of antigen-specific Treg cells and in the early onset of anemia and splenomegaly and the late development of arthritis and high titers of IgG auto Abs. Disease is initiated by autoreactive T cells, which escape negative selection by expressing a second TCR with a different specificity or an altered affinity. Transfer of Ag-specific Treg cells ameliorates the early onset signs of disease but does not prevent the development of long-term chronic pathologies. Altogether, our results suggest that Ag dose directly affects Treg-cell generation and thus, the set-up of T-cell tolerance.
Keywords: Avidity; T cells; Tolerance; Treg-cell development.
© 2014 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.