Abstract
In Brown-Norway (BN) rats mercuric chloride induces an autoimmune disease characterized by an increase in serum IgE concentration, and by the production of anti-glomerular basement membrane antibodies responsible for a glomerulonephritis with a heavy proteinuria. (i) This disease results from a B-cell polyclonal activation probably due to frequent anti-class II T cells. (ii) The self limitation observed in this model is associated with both a decrease in the frequency of anti-class II T cells and the emergence of CD8+ T cells able to suppress these autoreactive T cells. (iii) In Lewis (LEW) rats which do not develop autoimmunity, HgCl2 provokes the appearance of non-antigen-specific CD8+ T cells responsible for a depression of T-cell functions. The aim of this work was to test the effect of treatment with an anti-CD8 monoclonal antibody (MoAb) in both BN and LEW rats. Anti-CD8 MoAb-treated rats were effectively depleted in CD8+ T cells. However, neither the induction nor regulation phases of mercury-induced autoimmunity were modified in BN rats. Mercury-induced immunosuppression in LEW rats was abrogated; however, depletion in CD8+ T cells did not allow the disease to occur in that strain. Finally, CD8 depletion induced in normal BN rats the appearance of rare anti-class II T cells showing that these cells are normally present in that strain but negatively controlled by suppressor T cells.
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