Role of T cell receptor V beta genes in Theiler's virus-induced demyelination of mice.

  • Rodriguez M
  • Patick A
  • Pease L
  • et al.
38Citations
Citations of this article
15Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Intracerebral infection of certain strains of mice with Theiler's virus results in chronic immune-mediated demyelination in spinal cord. We used mouse mutants with deletion of the V beta class of TCR genes to examine the role of TCR genes in this demyelinating disease which is similar to multiple sclerosis. Quantitative analysis of spinal cord lesions demonstrated a markedly increased number and extent of demyelinated lesions in persistently infected RIII S/J mice which have a massive deletion of the TCR V beta-chain (V beta 5.2, V beta 8.3, V beta 5.1, V beta 8.2, V beta 5.3, V beta 8.1, V beta 13, V beta 12, V beta 11, V beta 9, V beta 6, V beta 15, V beta 17) compared with B10.RIII mice which are of identical MHC haplotype (H-2r) but have normal complement of V beta TCR genes. In contrast, infection of C57L (H-2b) or C57BR (H-2k) mice which have deletion of the V beta TCR genes (V beta 5.2, V beta 8.3, V beta 5.1, V beta 8.2, V beta 5.3, V beta 8.1, V beta 13, V beta 12, V beta 11, and V beta 9) resulted in few demyelinating lesions. Genetic segregation analysis of (B10.RIII x RIII S/J) x RIII S/J backcrossed mice and (B10.RIII x RIII S/J) F2 mice demonstrated correlation of increased susceptibility to demyelination with deletion of TCR V beta genes. The increase in number of demyelinating lesions correlated with increase in number of virus-Ag+ cells in spinal cord. These experiments provide strong evidence that the structural diversity at the TCR beta-complex can influence susceptibility to virus-induced demyelination.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Rodriguez, M., Patick, A. K., Pease, L. R., & David, C. S. (1992). Role of T cell receptor V beta genes in Theiler’s virus-induced demyelination of mice. The Journal of Immunology, 148(3), 921–927. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.148.3.921

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free