Abstract

Epidemiological studies have confidently linked occupational crystalline silica exposure to autoimmunity, but pathogenic mechanisms and role of genetic predisposition remain poorly defined. Although studies of single inbred strains have yielded insights, understanding the relationships between lung pathology, silica-induced autoimmunity, and genetic predisposition will require examination of a broad spectrum of responses and susceptibilities. We defined the characteristics of silicosis and autoimmunity and their relationships using the genetically heterogeneous diversity outbred (DO) mouse population and determined the suitability of this model for investigating silica-induced autoimmunity. Clinically relevant lung and autoimmune phenotypes were assessed 12 weeks after a transoral dose of 0, 5, or 10 mg crystalline silica in large cohorts of DO mice. Data were further analyzed for correlations, hierarchical clustering, and sex effects. DO mice exhibited a wide range of responses to silica, including mild to severe silicosis and importantly silica-induced systemic autoimmunity. Strikingly, about half of PBS controls were anti-nuclear antibodies (ANA) positive, however, few had disease-associated specificities, whereas most ANAs in silica-exposed mice showed anti-ENA5 reactivity. Correlation and hierarchical clustering showed close association of silicosis, lung biomarkers, and anti-ENA5, while other autoimmune characteristics, such as ANA and glomerulonephritis, clustered separately. Silica-exposed males had more lung inflammation, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid cells, IL-6, and autoantibodies. DO mice are susceptible to both silicosis and silica-induced autoimmunity and show substantial individual variations reflecting their genetic diverseness and the importance of predisposition particularly for autoimmunity. This model provides a new tool for deciphering the relationship between silica exposure, genes, and disease.

Highlights

  • Crystalline silica is an abundant mineral found in rock, sand, and soil, and exposure is an environmental or occupational hazard in construction, mining, and other dusty trades [1, 2]

  • To assess the frequency of systemic autoimmunity induced by silica exposure in the diversity outbred (DO) population, we examined immunoglobulin and autoantibody levels, spleen size, and kidney pathology

  • We characterized the range of crystalline silicaassociated pathology in the genetically heterogeneous DO mouse population to determine whether this model was suitable for defining causal mechanisms of both pulmonary silicosis and silicainduced autoimmunity

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Summary

Introduction

Crystalline silica is an abundant mineral found in rock, sand, and soil, and exposure is an environmental or occupational hazard in construction, mining, and other dusty trades [1, 2]. Silica exposure results in more pronounced lung responses and exacerbates autoimmunity in susceptible mice; the limited animal studies of silica-induced autoimmunity have revealed little regarding the mechanisms involved [9, 16,17,18,19]. This paucity of information is a significant barrier to furthering our understanding of how silica-mediated pathology leads to autoimmunity

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