Abstract

Monoclonal antibodies (MoAb) to L3T4 have been used successfully to suppress autoimmunity in murine models for several human autoimmune diseases. To clarify the immunologic and clinical consequences of treatment with anti-L3T4, we examined the effects of chronic administration of anti-L3T4 on the composition of lymphoid organs, the function of lymphocytes, and the histopathology of autoimmune disease in lupus-prone NZB/NZW F 1 (B/W) mice. Weekly treatment with anti-L3T4 (2 mg/mouse) from age 5 to 8 months depleted L3T4 + cells from the spleen and lymph nodes, and prevented the development of splenomegaly and lymphadenopathy. The MoAb bound to target cells in the thymus and modulated their expression of the L3T4 antigen but, in contrast to its effect in extrathymic sites, anti-L3T4 did not deplete the target population from the thymus. In fact, after 3 months of therapy, mice that had been treated with anti-L3T4 had much larger thymuses than control mice that had been treated with saline, suggesting that treatment with anti-L3T4 prevented the thymic atrophy that occurs spontaneously in murine lupus. Despite depleting L3T4 + cells from the spleen, treatment with anti-L3T4 did not diminish the response of splenic lymphocytes to T and B cell mitogens, and it augmented splenic natural killer (NK) cell activity. Finally, treatment with anti-L3T4 decreased the diverse histopathologic manifestations of murine lupus. It dramatically reduced glomerular immunoglobulin and complement deposition and diminished lymphocytic infiltration and vasculitis in the kidneys. Treatment also reduced extrarenal immunopathology, including focal hepatitis and salivary gland infiltration. These observations have implications regarding the use of CD4 MoAb in people with autoimmune diseases.

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