Abstract

Experimental autoimmune uveitis (EAU) serves as an animal model of ocular inflammation. The disease is caused by the immunization of microgram amounts of a soluble retinal protein, designated S-antigen, in susceptible animal strains, including primates. We induced EAU and experimental autoimmune pinealitis (EAP) in Lewis rats with a small synthetic peptide corresponding to amino acid positions 106–121 in yeast histone H3. This peptide contains five consecutive amino acids identical to a uveitopathogenic site (peptide M) in human S-antigen. Lymph node or mononuclear cells from different species of animals immunized either with histone H3 or with peptide M showed significant cross-reaction as measured by in vitro lymphocyte mitogenesis assay using [ 3H]thymidine. Also, we adoptively transferred the EAU and EAP in naive rats by immune lymph node cells. These findings support the fact that selected bacterial, viral, or fungal proteins with amino acid sequence homologies to normal retinal proteins are uveitopathogenic and, as such, provide a basis for autoimmune inflammatory diseases.

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