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Liver is a possible site for the proliferation of abnormal CD3+4-8- double-negative lymphocytes in autoimmune MRL-lpr/lpr mice

MRL-lpr/lpr mice develop a severe autoimmune disease that resembles systemic lupus erythematosis in humans. The predominant immunological feature in these mice is the development of peripheral lymphadenopathy due to the expansion of an unusual T cell subset (TCR-alpha/beta +5CD3+4-8-B220+), which ma...

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Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1990
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2188149/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2141631
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collection PubMed
description MRL-lpr/lpr mice develop a severe autoimmune disease that resembles systemic lupus erythematosis in humans. The predominant immunological feature in these mice is the development of peripheral lymphadenopathy due to the expansion of an unusual T cell subset (TCR-alpha/beta +5CD3+4-8-B220+), which may be related to the onset of their autoimmunity. However, it is unknown whether such abnormal lymphocytes proliferate in the specific organs or not. We demonstrated in the present study that the number of liver nonparenchymal mononuclear cells (MNC) in the diseased MRL-lpr/lpr mice was 10 times greater than that of control MRL-+/+ mice. Moreover, the freshly isolated liver MNC of MRL-lpr/lpr mice vigorously proliferated in vitro and consisted of abnormal CD3+4-8- lymphocytes. Such in vitro proliferation was not observed in the MNC of other peripheral lymphoid organs. A potent natural cytotoxicity was also confined to the liver MNC in MRL-lpr/lpr mice. In vivo injection of [3H]TdR demonstrated that liver MNC incorporated [3H]TdR; such incorporation showed a peak on day 1, and the MNC-incorporated [3H]TdR appeared in the lymph nodes as late as day 5 after the injection. These results suggest that the liver is a possible site for the proliferation of abnormal lymphocytes, which may migrate thereafter into the peripheral organs in MRL-lpr/lpr mice.
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spelling pubmed-21881492008-04-17 Liver is a possible site for the proliferation of abnormal CD3+4-8- double-negative lymphocytes in autoimmune MRL-lpr/lpr mice J Exp Med Articles MRL-lpr/lpr mice develop a severe autoimmune disease that resembles systemic lupus erythematosis in humans. The predominant immunological feature in these mice is the development of peripheral lymphadenopathy due to the expansion of an unusual T cell subset (TCR-alpha/beta +5CD3+4-8-B220+), which may be related to the onset of their autoimmunity. However, it is unknown whether such abnormal lymphocytes proliferate in the specific organs or not. We demonstrated in the present study that the number of liver nonparenchymal mononuclear cells (MNC) in the diseased MRL-lpr/lpr mice was 10 times greater than that of control MRL-+/+ mice. Moreover, the freshly isolated liver MNC of MRL-lpr/lpr mice vigorously proliferated in vitro and consisted of abnormal CD3+4-8- lymphocytes. Such in vitro proliferation was not observed in the MNC of other peripheral lymphoid organs. A potent natural cytotoxicity was also confined to the liver MNC in MRL-lpr/lpr mice. In vivo injection of [3H]TdR demonstrated that liver MNC incorporated [3H]TdR; such incorporation showed a peak on day 1, and the MNC-incorporated [3H]TdR appeared in the lymph nodes as late as day 5 after the injection. These results suggest that the liver is a possible site for the proliferation of abnormal lymphocytes, which may migrate thereafter into the peripheral organs in MRL-lpr/lpr mice. The Rockefeller University Press 1990-07-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2188149/ /pubmed/2141631 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Articles
Liver is a possible site for the proliferation of abnormal CD3+4-8- double-negative lymphocytes in autoimmune MRL-lpr/lpr mice
title Liver is a possible site for the proliferation of abnormal CD3+4-8- double-negative lymphocytes in autoimmune MRL-lpr/lpr mice
title_full Liver is a possible site for the proliferation of abnormal CD3+4-8- double-negative lymphocytes in autoimmune MRL-lpr/lpr mice
title_fullStr Liver is a possible site for the proliferation of abnormal CD3+4-8- double-negative lymphocytes in autoimmune MRL-lpr/lpr mice
title_full_unstemmed Liver is a possible site for the proliferation of abnormal CD3+4-8- double-negative lymphocytes in autoimmune MRL-lpr/lpr mice
title_short Liver is a possible site for the proliferation of abnormal CD3+4-8- double-negative lymphocytes in autoimmune MRL-lpr/lpr mice
title_sort liver is a possible site for the proliferation of abnormal cd3+4-8- double-negative lymphocytes in autoimmune mrl-lpr/lpr mice
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2188149/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2141631