Abstract

Environmental factors including drugs, mineral oils and heavy metals such as lead, gold and mercury are triggers of autoimmune diseases in animal models or even in occupationally exposed humans. After exposure to subtoxic levels of mercury (Hg), genetically susceptible strains of mice develop an autoimmune disease characterized by the production of highly specific anti-nucleolar autoantibodies, hyperglobulinemia and nephritis. However, mice can be tolerized to the disease by a single low dose administration of Hg. Lymphocyte Activation Gene-3 (LAG-3) is a CD4-related, MHC-class II binding molecule expressed on activated T cells and NK cells which maintains lymphocyte homeostatic balance via various inhibitory mechanisms. In our model, administration of anti-LAG-3 monoclonal antibody broke tolerance to Hg resulting in autoantibody production and an increase in serum IgE level. In addition, LAG-3-deficient B6.SJL mice not only had increased susceptibility to Hg-induced autoimmunity but were also unresponsive to tolerance induction. Conversely, adoptive transfer of wild-type CD4+ T cells was able to partially rescue LAG-3-deficient mice from the autoimmune disease. Further, in LAG-3-deficient mice, mercury elicited higher amounts of IL-6, IL-4 and IFN-γ, cytokines known to play a critical role in mercury-induced autoimmunity. Therefore, we conclude that LAG-3 exerts an important regulatory effect on autoimmunity elicited by a common environmental pollutant.

Highlights

  • Mercury (Hg) is a hazardous environmental contaminant

  • Because Lymphocyte Activation Gene-3 (LAG-3) is expressed on activated T cells, we decided to investigate the effect of HgCl2 treatment on the expression of LAG-3

  • The studies in this paper indicate that LAG-3 plays a critical role in decreasing the manifestations of Hg-induced autoimmunity

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Summary

Introduction

Several studies report that mercury exposure is associated with autoimmune dysfunction in occupationally-exposed humans [1,2,3,4,5]. In susceptible H2S mice such as A.SW or B6.SJL, subtoxic levels of HgCl2 induce an autoimmune dysfunction characterized by glomerulonephritis, production of antinucleolar autoantibodies (ANoA) and hypergammaglobulinemia (especially pronounced for IgE and IgG1) [6,7,8,9,10,11]. The increase in polyclonal immunoglobulins peaks 2 weeks after the first HgCl2 injection and returns to normal levels by week 4. The mechanisms by which mercury can induce disease are not fully understood [7] interference with signal transduction pathways in T cells might play an important role [15]

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