Abstract

To establish the relationship between autoreactive antibodies and vomitoxin-induced immunoglobulin A (IgA) nephropathy, the effects of dietary vomitoxin exposure on the antigen specificity of serum IgA. IgA-producing cells and accumulated mesangial IgA in BALB/c mice were assessed. Exposure to dietary vomitoxin for 8 wk caused a significant increase in total serum IgA. There was a concurrent significant increase in serum IgA specific for trinitrophenol (TNP), phosphorylcholine, cardiolipin and sphingomyelin compared with controls, suggesting an elevation of autoreactive IgA. Casein, a protein found in the AIN-76A diet, could inhibit binding of serum IgA to sphingomyelin and cardiolipin, indicating that these antibodies may be polyspecific. When enzyme-linked immunospot assay was used to monitor autoreactive IgA production, trends were observed towards increased IgA-secreting cells specific for TNP, cardiolipin and sphingomyelin in Peyer's patches from vomitoxin-fed mice compared with control mice. IgA-producing cells reactive with TNP were increased in the spleen of vomitoxin-fed mice whereas effects on IgA-secreting cells for the other antigens were marginal. Marked deposition of mesangial IgA was also observed in vomitoxin-fed mice compared with controls. When IgA was eluted from the kidney sections of treated mice and tested by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, it exhibited a strong binding to the above antigen panel as well as inulin, DNA and casein. These data suggest that dietary vomitoxin induced the polyclonal activation of IgA-producing cells and that resultant autoreactive IgA was subsequently deposited in the kidney mesangium.

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