Immunoglobulin G from patients with Graves' disease induces interleukin-16 and RANTES expression in cultured human thyrocytes: A putative mechanism for T-cell infiltration of the thyroid in autoimmune disease

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Abstract

Mechanisms underlying lymphocyte infiltration of the thyroid gland and orbit in Graves' disease (GD) are poorly understood. The IGF-I receptor (IGF-IR) is a newly recognized self-antigen that, when activated in GD fibroblasts by IGF-I or GD-IgGs, provokes the expression of IL-16 and RANTES (regulated upon activation, normal T cell expressed and secreted)-dependent T lymphocyte chemoattraction and hyaluronan synthesis. IL-16 is aCD4+-specific ligand, and RANTES is a C-C chemokine. Here we report that IGF-I and GD-IgG could induce IL-16 and RANTES in cultured human thyrocytes in a time-dependent manner. Importantly, human TSH failed to induce either chemoattractant. This induction could be attenuated by dexamethasone. Rapamycin, a specific inhibitor of the FRAP/mammalian target of rapamycin/p70s6k pathway, prevented GD-IgG-provoked IL-16 synthesis. IH7, a monoclonal antibody directed at IGF-IR also blocked the induction of chemoattraction as well as RANTES mRNA synthesis. Our findings suggest that thyrocytes can be activated by GD-IgG and IGF-I to express powerful T-cell chemoattractants. These actions of GD-IgG appear to be mediated through pathways independent of the TSH receptor. Thus, in GD, thyrocytes may participate directly in lymphocyte recruitment through their expression of IL-16 and RANTES. Copyright © 2006 by The Endocrine Society.

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Gianoukakis, A. G., Douglas, R. S., King, C. S., Cruikshank, W. W., & Smith, T. J. (2006). Immunoglobulin G from patients with Graves’ disease induces interleukin-16 and RANTES expression in cultured human thyrocytes: A putative mechanism for T-cell infiltration of the thyroid in autoimmune disease. Endocrinology, 147(4), 1941–1949. https://doi.org/10.1210/en.2005-1375

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