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Expression Of Anti-dna Immunoglobulin Transgenes In Non-autoimmune Mice
Erikson, J.; Radic, M. Z.; Camper, S. A.; Hardy, R. R.; Carmack, C.; Weigert, M.
1991-01-24
Citation:Erikson, J; Radic, MZ; Camper, SA; Hardy, RR; Carmack, C; Weigert, M. (1991) "Expression Of Anti-dna Immunoglobulin Transgenes In Non-autoimmune Mice." Nature 349(6307): 331-334. <http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/62839>
Abstract: SELF-REACTIVE B cells can be regulated by either deletion or inactivation 1. These manifestations of self-tolerance have been dramatically shown in transgenic mice in which the number of self-reactive cells has been artificially expanded 2,3. We have now extended these models to ask if B-cell tolerance as described for non-disease-associated antigens also operates for the targets of autoimmunity. The target we have chosen is DNA. Anti-DNA antibodies are diagnostic of certain autoimmune syndromes in humans and are a characteristic of the murine model of systemic autoimmunity, the MRI/Ipr mouse4. Antibodies to both single-stranded and double-stranded DNA have been implicated in disease 5,6. By generating anti-DNA transgenic mice, we have addressed the question of whether DNA-specific B cells are regulated in normal (non-autoimmune) mice. We indeed found that most transgenic B cells bind DNA, yet we failed to detect secreted anti-DNA. We suggest that as a consequence of their self-reactivity these B cells are developmentally arrested.