The mechanisms underlying the initiation of virus-induced autoimmune disease are not well understood. Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus- induced demyelinating disease (TMEV-IDD), a mouse model of multiple sclerosis, is initiated by TMEV-specific CD4+ T cells targeting virally infected central nervous system-resident (CNS-resident) antigen-presenting cells (APCs), leading-to chronic activation of myelin epitope-specific CD4+ T cells via epitope spreading. Here we show that F4/80+, I-A5+, CD45+ macrophages/microglia isolated from the CNS of TMEV-infected SJL mice have the ability to endogenously process and present virus epitopes at both acute and chronic stages of the disease. Relevant to the initiation of virus- induced autoimmune disease, only CNS APCs isolated from TMEV-infected mice with preexisting myelin damage, not those isolated from naive mice or mice with acute disease, were able to endogenously present a variety of proteolipid protein epitopes to specific Th1 lines. These results offer a mechanism by which localized virus-induced, T cell-mediated inflammatory myelin destruction leads to the recruitment/activation of CNS-resident APCs that can process and present endogenous self epitopes to autoantigen-specific T cells, and thus provide a mechanistic basis by which epitope spreading occurs.
CITATION STYLE
Katz-Levy, Y., Neville, K. L., Girvin, A. M., Vanderlugt, C. L., Pope, J. G., Tan, L. J., & Miller, S. D. (1999). Endogenous presentation of self myelin epitopes by CNS-resident APCs in Theiler’s virus-infected mice. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 104(5), 599–610. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI7292
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