Autoantibodies to proteinase 3 (PR3) are involved in the pathogenesis of autoimmune-mediated vasculitis in Wegener granulomatosis (WG). To address the question how the autoantigen PR3 becomes a target of adaptive immunity, we investigated the effect of PR3 on immature dendritic cells (iDCs) in patients with WG, healthy blood donors, and patients with Crohn disease (CD), another granulomatous disease. PR3 induces phenotypic and functional maturation of a fraction of blood monocyte-derived iDCs. PR3-treated DCs express high levels of CD83, a DC-restricted marker of maturation, CD80 and CD86, and HLA-DR. Furthermore, the DCs become fully competent antigen-presenting cells and can induce stimulation of PR3-specific CD4+ T cells, which produce IFN-γ. PR3-maturated DCs derived from WG patients induce a higher IFN-γ response of PR3-specific CD4+ T cells compared with patients with CD and healthy controls. The maturation of DCs mediated through PR3 was inhibited by a serine protease inhibitor, by antibodies directed against the protease-activated receptor-2 (PAR-2), and by inhibition of phospholipase C, suggesting that the interactions of PR3 with PAR-2 are involved in the induction of DC maturation. Wegener autoantigen interacts with a “gateway” receptor (PAR-2) on iDCs in vitro triggering their maturation and licenses them for a T helper 1 (Th1)–type response potentially favoring granuloma formation in WG.
Severe combined immunodeficient mice reconstituted with human leukocytes have been useful to model parts of the human immune system, including some of its diseases (e.g., AIDS). Because no human polymorphonuclear leukocytes (huPMN) develop in these xenograft models, diseases such as several forms of vasculitis cannot be modeled using this approach. To provide such a model for vasculitis, human skin patches were grafted onto double-knockout Pfp(-/-)Rag2(-/-) mice, which not only lack functional T and B cells but which are also devoid of natural killer cells. After intravenous injection, a high proportion of huPMNs survived within the circulation and accumulated in the human blood vessels. The accumulation increased considerably after the endothelium of the skin patches had been stimulated by tumor necrosis factor-alpha. Alpha mild perivascular neutrophilic infiltration and vascular necrosis was observed in the microvessels of the skin patches. Thus, a xenograft model of vasculitis with predominant huPMNs infiltration has been established for the first time.
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