In Brown-Norway (BN) rats mercuric chloride induces an autoimmune disease characterized by an increase in serum IgE concentration, and by the production of anti-glomerular basement membrane antibodies responsible for a glomerulonephritis with a heavy proteinuria. (i) This disease results from a B-cell polyclonal activation probably due to frequent anti-class II T cells. (ii) The self limitation observed in this model is associated with both a decrease in the frequency of anti-class II T cells and the emergence of CD8+ T cells able to suppress these autoreactive T cells. (iii) In Lewis (LEW) rats which do not develop autoimmunity, HgCl2 provokes the appearance of non-antigen-specific CD8+ T cells responsible for a depression of T-cell functions. The aim of this work was to test the effect of treatment with an anti-CD8 monoclonal antibody (MoAb) in both BN and LEW rats. Anti-CD8 MoAb-treated rats were effectively depleted in CD8+ T cells. However, neither the induction nor regulation phases of mercury-induced autoimmunity were modified in BN rats. Mercury-induced immunosuppression in LEW rats was abrogated; however, depletion in CD8+ T cells did not allow the disease to occur in that strain. Finally, CD8 depletion induced in normal BN rats the appearance of rare anti-class II T cells showing that these cells are normally present in that strain but negatively controlled by suppressor T cells.
Mercuric chloride induces in the Brown-Norway rat a biphasic autoimmune disease characterized initially by linear IgG deposits along the glomerular basement membrane followed later by granular IgG deposition. In the present study, anti-glomerular basement membrane antibodies and immune complex-like material were sequentially assessed in serial serum samples. Both were transiently found at the same period. Glomerular linear IgG deposits were present on day 11 but circulating anti-glomerular basement membrane antibodies were only found later on day 16. Circulating immune complexes were first detectable on day 8 before the earliest granular IgG deposits were first observed in the spleen vessels on day 16. The disappearance of circulating anti-glomerular basement membrane antibodies and of circulating immune complexes, although HgCl2 injections were pursued, is in agreement with the self-limited character of mercuric chloride induced autoimmune disease and suggests the induction of immunosuppressive mechanisms.
HgCl2 induces autoimmunity in Brown-Norway rats and immunosuppression in Lewis rats. In the latter rats, HgCl2 triggers the proliferation of T suppressor/cytotoxic (OX8+) cells which actively suppress T cell functions. This led us to study the effect of HgCl2 on experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE), a T cell-mediated autoimmune disease obtained following immunization with basic protein (BP). It will be shown that HgCl2 attenuates or even prevents clinical manifestations of EAE and inhibits both the proliferative response of T cells to BP and the anti-BP antibody response. This immunosuppression was not due to a defect at the T helper cell or antigen-processing cell level but to the emergence of T suppressor cells.
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