Abstract
To investigate whether superantigens induce interstitial pneumonia associated with collagen vascular disease (CVD), staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB) was intratracheally administered to SCID mice reconstituted with peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from CVD patients that suffered lung complications. Although a slight accumulation of inflammatory cells into the perivascular area was seen in the lungs of SCID mice injected with PBMCs from CVD patients or healthy donors, SEB administration significantly increased the severity of inflammation in the lungs of SCID mice that received CVD patient PBMCs. Furthermore, human leukocytes were detected by immunohistochemistry in the lungs of SCID mice that received SEB after reconstitution with PBMCs from CVD patients but not in other groups of SCID mice. CD45RO(+) memory T cells comprised the majority of infiltrating human leukocytes. These results suggest the possibility that external superantigens may induce the development of interstitial pneumonia in patients that have a genetic background predisposition to autoimmune disease.
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