Urinary bladder epithelium antigen induces CD8+ T cell tolerance, activation, and autoimmune response

2007 
The effort to explore the specific autoimmune mechanisms of urinary bladder has long been hindered due to a lack of proper animal models. To better elucidate this issue, we developed a novel line of transgenic (Tg) mice, designated as URO-OVA mice, that express the model Ag OVA as a “self”-Ag on the bladder epithelium. URO-OVA mice are naturally tolerant to OVA and show no response to OVA stimulation. Adoptive transfer of naive OVA-specific T cells showed cell proliferation, activation, and infiltration but no bladder histopathology. In contrast, adoptive transfer of activated OVA-specific T cells induced OVA-mediated histological bladder inflammation. Increased mast cells and up-regulated mRNA expressions of TNF-α, nerve growth factor, and substance P precursor were also observed in the inflamed bladder. To further facilitate bladder autoimmunity study, we crossbred URO-OVA mice with OVA-specific CD8+ TCR Tg mice (OT-I mice) to generate a dual Tg line URO-OVA/OT-I mice. The latter mice naturally acquire clonal deletion for autoreactive OT-I CD8+ T cells (partial deletion in the thymus and severe deletion in the periphery). Despite this clonal deletion, URO-OVA/OT-I mice spontaneously develop autoimmune cystitis at 10 wk of age. Further studies demonstrated that the inflamed bladder contained infiltrating OT-I CD8+ T cells that had escaped clonal deletion and gained effector functions before developing histological bladder inflammation. Taken together, we demonstrate for the first time that the bladder epithelium actively presents self-Ag to the immune system and induces CD8+ T cell tolerance, activation, and autoimmune response.
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