Abstract
Spontaneously hypertensive (SH) rats immunized with mouse renin produce anti-renin antibodies, responsible for down-modulation of blood pressure, associated with an infiltration of kidneys by mononuclear cells. In this work, anti-renin T cells from SH rats immunized with renin have been stimulated in vitro, and we have studied in vitro and in vivo their effect on anti-renin antibody production by normal syngeneic B cells. We show that, in vitro, renin-activated T cells induce a renin-specific antibody response without addition of exogenous renin. Anti-renin T cells injected into naive SH rats trigger normal B cells to secrete high amounts of monospecific anti-renin IgG antibodies as early as day 5. These antibodies interfere with the homeostasis of the renin-angiotensin system leading to the normalization of blood pressure without any nephritis. These results show that anti-renin B cells are either not tolerant per se or in a reversible state of anergy. Our results also suggest that anti-renin B cells constitutively express renin-derived peptides in such a way that they may be stimulated by activated anti-renin T cells; these cells express IL-4 mRNA indicating that IL-4 could play a role in the differentiation of B cells.
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