Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9262680 | Current Opinion in Immunology | 2005 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Murine autoimmune gastritis is one of the most well-defined organ-specific autoimmune diseases. CD4+ T cells, which mediate the disease, recognize the highly abundant gastric H+/K+ ATPase heterodimer. The H+/K+ ATPase α subunit is also expressed in the thymus, in an aire-independent manner, whereas the H+/K+ ATPase β subunit is absent from the thymus. Analysis of both H+/K+ ATPase-specific T cell receptor transgenic mice with different affinities for the gastric antigen and mice deficient in the H+/K+ ATPase subunits has provided information on thymic and peripheral selection events. The H+/K+ ATPase antigens play an important role in purging the repertoire of gastritogenic T cells, and recent data have suggested that this tolerance induction occurs primarily in the periphery. The gastritis system provides a powerful approach to determine the impact of peripheral antigen presentation in the target organ draining lymph node on tolerance and autoimmune disease.
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Immunology and Microbiology
Immunology
Authors
Ian R van Driel, Simon Read, Tricia D Zwar, Paul A Gleeson,