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1.
We have recently reported antigenic (B-ccll) cross-reactivity between the mycobacterial 65 kDa heat shock protein (hsp65) and human lactoferrin (LF) and we suggested that this cross-reactivity might have a role in mycobacteria-associated autoimmune disease. Here, we have searched for anti-LFT-cell reactivity in Lewis rats submitted to a mycobacteria-triggered autoaggressive disorder (adjuvant arthritis, A A), an autoimmune disorder characterized by high anti-hsp65 reactivity. We have quantified the in vitro proliferate response to LF of lymph node and spleen cells of Lewis rats killed 9, 14 and 21 days after the immunization with the AA-triggering, mycobacteria-containing adjuvant (complete Freund's adjuvant. CFA). We found that LF induced significant proliferation of lymph node T cells of rats undergoing AA. This T-cell proliferation was not as marked as the one provoked by hsp65; it was, nevertheless, significantly higher (P < 0.05) than that produced by a non-arthritogenic antigen (i.e. albumin). T cells from naive or mineral oil (incomplete Frcund's adjuvant, IFA) injected rats did not respond to LF or hsp65. These data indicate that LF may work as an accessory stimulatory factor of the T-cell autoreactivity associated with mycobacteria-induced arthritis.  相似文献   

2.
Adjuvant arthritis (AA) is a T cell mediated disease which can be induced in genetically susceptible rats by immunization with heat-killed Mycobacterium tuberculosis ( Mt ) suspended in incomplete Freund's adjuvant. The critical mycobacterial T cell epitope for the induction of AA was previously identified as residues 178-186 of the mycobacterial 65 kDa heat shock protein ( Mt. hsp65 178-186 ). It was suggested that the development of AA was due to molecular mimicry between a mycobacterial epitope and a cartilage-associated self-antigen. However, until now such cartilage-associated mimicry epitope has not been identified. In this study we designed a computer search profile to predict mimicry self-epitopes, and investigated whether one or more of these self-epitopes could serve as mimicry epitopes in AA. Although several of these self-epitopes were recognized by arthritogenic T cells, no cross-reactivity was found between T cells specific for these self-epitopes and Mt. hsp65 178-186 specific T cells.  相似文献   

3.
Adjuvant arthritis (AA) is a T cell mediated disease which can be induced in genetically susceptible rats by immunization with heat-killed Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mt) suspended in incomplete Freund's adjuvant. The critical mycobacterial T cell epitope for the induction of AA was previously identified as residues 178-186 of the mycobacterial 65 kDa heat shock protein (Mt. hsp65(178-186)). It was suggested that the development of AA was due to molecular mimicry between a mycobacterial epitope and a cartilage-associated self-antigen. However, until now such cartilage-associated mimicry epitope has not been identified. In this study we designed a computer search profile to predict mimicry self-epitopes, and investigated whether one or more of these self-epitopes could serve as mimicry epitopes in AA. Although several of these self-epitopes were recognized by arthritogenic T cells, no cross-reactivity was found between T cells specific for these self-epitopes and Mt. hsp65(178-186) specific T cells.  相似文献   

4.
Tolerization of pathogenic antigens is one of the experimental strategies that has been proposed to prevent autoimmune disease. We have investigated here whether neonatal intraperitoneal infection of Lewis rats with Mycobacterium bovis-BCG has any effect on the expression of adjuvant arthritis (AA), an autoimmune disease that is produced by immunization of the rats with dead mycobacteria in mineral oil (i.e. Freund's complete adjuvant (FCA)). We found that neonatal infection with 108 viable BCG bacilli rendered all Lewis rats resistant to the expression of AA after FCA immunization. This BCG-induced protection from reactive arthritis was not seen in Lewis rats infected with smaller inocula (106 BCG bacilli) or if the infection was performed after the neonatal period (e.g. at 3 weeks of age). Neonatal administration of 65-kD mycobacterial heat shock protein (hsp65, a key antigen in the etiopathogenesis of AA) failed to protect Lewis rats from AA; injection of lactoferrin (an autoantigen that may be involved in the physiopathology of autoimmune arthritis) to newborn Lewis rats decreased the severity of AA observed after FCA immunization of the animals. Western blotting revealed that Lewis rats that had acquired resistance to AA also showed changes in their repertoire of antibody specificities; among these alterations was decreased anti-hsp65 reactivity. We conclude that neonatal infection with BCG, but not hsp65 injection, renders Lewis rats resistant to AA and that the phenomenon is associated with change in the repertoire of specificities of circulating antibodies.  相似文献   

5.
Adjuvant arthritis (AA) can be induced in genetically susceptible rats by immunization with heat-killed mycobacteria suspended in mineral oil. From our analysis of arthritogenic T cell clone A2b, obtained from an arthritic Lewis rat and specific for the 180-188 epitope of mycobacterial 65-kDa heat-shock protein (hsp 65), the possible origin of AA was explained by the existence of a molecular mimicry of the 180-188 epitope with a cartilage-associated self antigen. We now have shown that Lewis rats respond to the 180-188 epitope after Mycobacterium tuberculosis immunization and that arthritis-resistant Fisher and (Lewis x Fisher)F1 rats, although major histocompatibility complex class II identical with Lewis, do not respond to this epitope. However, in rare cases of arthritis in Fisher rats, responses to the epitope were seen. We obtained no evidence for a defect at the level of antigen processing and presentation or for suppression in Fisher rats. Thus, non-responsiveness in Fisher rats was likely due to a difference at the level of the T cell repertoire. Previously, we have reported that pretreatment with hsp 65 in experimental arthritis, and not only in AA, caused resistance to arthritis induction. We now present evidence that immunization with hsp 65 or in vitro stimulation with hsp 65 may lead to inhibition of responses specific for epitope 180-188. Thus the hsp 65-induced resistance to arthritis is probably caused by the induction of regulatory control specifically targeted at the 180-188 epitope. Especially in rats that tend to focus their responses on the critical 180-188 sequence, such as Lewis, regulation seems to develop following immunization with hsp 65. Since recent evidence suggests that hsp 65 and also the 180-188 epitope have a role in human arthritic conditions, the present findings are expected to contribute to further experimentation directed at exploiting hsp 65 or its epitopes for the development of new therapeutical approaches in humans.  相似文献   

6.
Conclusions hsp are molecules which are highly conserved from procaryotes to eukaryotes. At a first glance the immune system should treat these molecules as self. However, strong immune reactions to bacterial hsp are observed during infection in mammals.hsp65 plays a role in several autoimmune diseases in animal models. In AA in Lewis rats the involvement of hsp65 has been revealed by T cell clones which induce disease in naive recipients, or by T cell vaccination experiments. T cell clones which show in vivo activity have been used as tools in vitro to define epitopes involved in the disease process. In this manner mycobacterial hsp65 and its epitope peptide 180–188 were deduced for AA in Lewis rats. Similarily the epitope p277 was defined for diabetes in NOD mice.The role of hsp65 in several other autoimmune diseases was seen when animals were pretreated with hsp65 and found to be protected from subsequent induction of autoimmune disease. From the involvement of hsp65 in several different autoimmune diseases, it would appear that hsp65 is somehow a key factor in natural autoimmunity. At a fist glance this is surprising since mycobacterial hsp65 shows 50% amino acid homology with human hsp65, in other words it is half-self.Peptide epitopes, peptide 180–188 in AA in Lewis rats and p277 in IDDM in NOD mice, have been used for peptide vaccination, which represents another possibility for prevention of autoimmune disease. The immunological mechanism which leads to resistance from autoimmune disease involves hsp65 immunity and appears not to be associated with tolerance or non-responsiveness to hsp65, but seems to be due rather to modulation of naturally existing networks of idiotype-anti-idiotype T cells organized around hsp65 as the target antigen.  相似文献   

7.
The immune response to the mycobacterial 65-kDa heat shock protein (hsp65) is considered an important event in the induction of adjuvant arthritis (AA) in rats; this induction probably occurs through a molecular mimicry mechanism involving cross-reactivity against the rat homolog hsp60. To analyze the role of mammalian molecule hsp60 in arthritis, we generated a recombinant vaccinia virus (hsp60-VV) carrying the human hsp60 gene inserted into the thymidine kinase locus under the control of the 7.5k vaccinia virus promoter. Human hsp60 is almost identical to its rat homolog (97.4% linear amino acid homology) and shares about 50% of amino acid positions with Mycobacterium tuberculosis hsp65. The latter supposedly carries a critical epitope for AA induction that is not present in human hsp60. Infections with hsp60-VV of monkey cell cultures led to the expression of the human hsp60 molecule, as evidenced by immunoblotting analysis with specific monoclonal antibodies. Also, Lewis rats infected with hsp60-VV produced specific antibodies, demonstrating the in vivo expression of human hsp60 in the infected animals. Therefore, we used hsp60-VV to analyze whether the delivery of hsp60 could affect the induction of AA in Lewis rats. hsp60-VV clearly reduced and retarded arthritic symptoms when administered to rats at day 7 after AA induction. In contrast, inoculation of rats with a control recombinant vaccinia virus did not affect the course of the disease. The improvement in AA with hsp60-VV administration was associated with a specific immune response, as determined by the presence of antibodies to hsp60 in the sera and the proliferation induced by hsp60 of T cells from popliteal lymph nodes. These results support a critical role for immunity to heat shock proteins in AA. Since the protective construct is virtually identical to rat homolog hsp60, we conclude that immunity directed to conserved areas of this family of proteins is directly involved in the pathogenesis of AA.  相似文献   

8.
Summary T cells and antibodies against self and non-self hsp are present in both patients and healthy controls. T cells responding to hsp65 can be involved in autoimmune diseases, this was demonstrated for two site-specific animal autoimmune diseases: AA in Lewis rats and diabetes (IDDM) in NOD mice. In human ReA there is evidence for a direct stimulation of joint T cells by antigens of the organisms causing the infection which precedes the joint inflammation. The individual antigens of the triggering bacteria still have to be defined, but hsp65 may be of importance since this is one of the molecules recognized by synovial T cells in ReA patients.In RA there are no clear data implicating an infection in the initiation of joint inflammation, but mycobacteria have been suggested to be involved. We have discussed experimental findings which are in favor of, or in contradiction with, a role of mycobacterial antigens — particularly hsp65 — in the etiology of RA. T cells recognizing hsp65 and other mycobacterial antigens are present in the joint, but there is no indication for a specific involvement of one or a limited set of (myco)bacterial antigens in the pathogenesis of RA.  相似文献   

9.
OM-89 is a bacterial (Escherichia coli) extract used for oral administration in the treatment of RA. Given the evidence that immunity to bacterial heat shock antigens plays a critical role in the immunomodulation of arthritis and possibly inflammation in general, the purpose of the present studies was to evaluate the presence and immunogenicity of hsp in OM-89. Furthermore, we studied the effects of OM-89 in an experimental arthritis, where hsp are known to have a critical significance in disease development. In rats immunization with OM-89 was found to lead to proliferative T cell responses to hsp60 and hsp70 of both E. coli and mycobacterial origin. Conversely, immunization with hsp antigens was also found to induce T cell reactivity specific for OM-89. Based on this and the antigen specificity analysis of specific T cell lines, hsp70 (DnaK) turned out to be one of the major immunogenic constituents of OM-89. Parenteral immunization with OM-89 was found to reduce resistance to adjuvant arthritis (AA), whereas oral administration was found to protect against AA. Given the arthritis-inhibitory effect of oral OM-89 in AA, it is possible that peripheral tolerance is induced at the level of regulatory T cells with specificity for hsp. This may also constitute a mode of action for OM-89 as an arthritis-suppressive oral drug.  相似文献   

10.
Heat shock proteins (hsp) are highly conserved, immune-dominant microbial proteins, whose expression is increased at sites of inflammation. In the experimental model of adjuvant arthritis (AA) immune responses to hsp determine the outcome of disease. AA can be transferred with a single T cell clone specific for a sequence of mycobacterial hsp65 (Mhsp65). Immunization with whole Mhsp65 on the other hand, protects in virtually all forms of experimental arthritis, including AA. This protective effect seems the consequence of the induction of a T cell response directed against self-hsp60. A similar protective effect of self-hsp60-specific T cells seems present in patients with a spontaneous remitting form of juvenile idiopathic arthritis. Next to hsp60, other hsp have similar protective effects in arthritis, while other conserved microbial proteins lack such capacity. Nasal administration of hsp60 peptides induces IL-10-driven regulatory T cells that are highly effective in suppressing arthritis. Thus hsp60, or peptides derived from hsp60, are suitable candidates for immune therapy in chronic arthritis.  相似文献   

11.
In a previous study we have shown that Lewis rats were completely protected from adjuvant arthritis by pretreatment with a nonapeptide (residues 180-188) of the 65-kD mycobacterial heat shock protein. Here we address questions of specificity and mechanism(s) of protection. We demonstrate that complete protection against adjuvant arthritis can only be achieved by pre-immunization with the nonapeptide, while pretreatment with either the octapeptide (residues 181-188) of the 65-kD heat shock protein or unrelated immunogenic peptides failed to affect adjuvant arthritis. Interestingly, pretreatment with the nonapeptide of the 65-kD heat shock protein did not protect Lewis rats from type II collagen-induced arthritis. These results demonstrate that protection is both epitope and disease specific. Co-injection of the nonapeptide with mycobacterial antigen even at a weight ratio of 5:1 (nonapeptide:mycobacteria) failed to influence the disease, suggesting that the role of the nonapeptide is not as a 'blocking peptide'. T cells from rats immunized with nonapeptide respond to the nonapeptide as well as to mycobacteria in vitro, and adoptively transfer protection to naive recipients. The data indicate that the nonapeptide-induced protection may result from a T cell-mediated specific suppression.  相似文献   

12.
Oral administration of mycobacterial 65-kDa heat shock protein (HSP) given daily for 5 days prior to immunization with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mt) suppressed the development of adjuvant arthritis (AA) in rats. AA was significantly suppressed by 30 and 300 μg HSP, and variably by 0.3, 3 μg or 1 mg. Histological analysis of joint samples obtained from control and test rats confirmed the suppression of AA in the fed group. Feeding Mt or hen egg lysozyme (HEL) failed to affect AA, indicating that the suppression was HSP specific. The oral administration of 30 μg HSP decreased both delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) reactions and proliferative responses to HSP and Mt. In addition, the proliferation of lymph node cells (LNC) from Mt-sensitized rats was inhibited by the addition of spleen cells (SPC) from HSP-fed animals, possibly by the secretion of transforming growth factor (TGF)-β. Spleen cells obtained from tolerized donors were capable of transferring the tolerance to naive recipients. These results demonstrate that feeding HSP is an effective way to suppress AA and that the suppression of AA may be mediated by regulatory T cells generated following oral administration of mycobacterial 65-kDa HSP.  相似文献   

13.
The mycobacterial 65 kDa heat shock protein (HSP65) is of critical significance in the model of adjuvant arthritis (AA). Arthritogenic and protective T cell clones obtained from arthritic rats recognized the 180-188 sequence of HSP65. Previous reports have shown that administration of HSP65 prior to disease induction led to resistance to arthritis in the AA model and in several other models of experimental arthritis. Here, we report the development of immunity to HSP65 and the critical 180-188 epitope during the course of AA. Following Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MT) immunization both antibodies and T cell responses to HSP65 were detected. Proliferative responses to the 180-188 epitope were seen exclusively in the local draining lymph node cells at day 14 after immunization. The anatomical distribution and course of T cell responses to HSP65 and its 180-188 epitope are compatible with T cell regulated control of the disease. Although lower HSP65 antibody levels were observed in the animals with severe arthritis, in individual animals no evidence was obtained for a relationship between development of HSP65 humoral immunity and arthritis severity. Nevertheless, during disease exacerbation, elicited by HSP65 immunization during disease development, elevated T cell responses against HSP65 and its 180-188 epitope were found. In contrast, we obtained evidence that successful transfer of arthritis resistance to naive recipients depends on the transfer of HSP65 specific T cells. On the basis of these results, it seems that HSP65 plays a crucial role in the T cell regulatory events involved in both the induction of, and protection against, AA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
The pathogenesis of T cell-mediated diseases like rheumatoid arthritis (RA) has typically been explained in the context of the Th1-Th2 paradigm: the initiation/propagation by pro-inflammatory cytokines, and downregulation by Th2 cytokines. However, in our study based on the adjuvant-induced arthritis (AA) model of RA, we observed that Lewis (LEW) (RT.1(l)) rats at the recovery phase of AA showed the highest level of IFN-gamma in recall response to mycobacterial heat-shock protein 65 (Bhsp65), whereas AA-resistant Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) (RT.1(l)) rats secreted high levels of IFN-gamma much earlier following disease induction. However, no significant secretion of IL-10 or TGF-beta was observed in either strain. Furthermore, pre-treatment of LEW rats with a peptide of self (rat) hsp65 (R465), which induced T cells secreting predominantly IFN-gamma, afforded protection against AA and decreased IL-17 expression by the arthritogenic epitope-restimulated T cells. These results provide a novel perspective on the pathogenesis of autoimmune arthritis.  相似文献   

15.
Summary: Determinant spreading has been implicated in the pathogenesis of certain autoimmune diseases in animal models. We have observed that during the course of adjuvant arthritis (AA) in the Lewis rat, there is 'diversification' of response to the bacterial 65-kDa heat shock protein (Bhsp65) towards its carboxy-terminal determinants (BCTD). Strikingly, pretreatment of naive Lewis rats with BCTD affords significant protection from AA. Our preliminary studies indicate that the diversification of response to BCTD in the Lewis rat is probably triggered in vivo by the induction and enhanced processing of self(rat) hsp65. Thus, the self hsp65-directed T-cell responses appear to be involved in mediating natural remission from acute inflammatory arthritis induced by a foreign antigen, Myco-bacterium tuberculosis. This the first report describing that the new T-cell specificities arising during the course of an autoimmune disease are regulatory/protective rather than pathogenic. Moreover, our results suggest that a final common mechanism involving BCTD might be recruited by other rac strains which either are resistant to AA (WKY rats) or whose susceptibility to AA is modulated significantly by microbial flora (Fisher rats). The results of this study would contribute significantly to understanding of the pathogenesis of human rheumatoid arthritis, and in devising new therapeutic strategies for this disease.  相似文献   

16.
Injection of incomplete Freund's adjuvant (IFA) into the footpads of BALB/c mice induced an acute inflammation. Draining popliteal lymph nodes showed major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II-restricted proliferation when challenged in vitro with recombinant Mycobacterium bovis 65-kDa heat shock protein (hsp65). αβ Tcell receptor-positive, CD4+, hsp65-specific T cell lines and clones were generated from these lymph nodes, and 87% of clones responded to a P galactosidase fusion protein containing residues 238–573 of human hsp60. Seventy percent of these hsp60-responsive clones also responded to a synthetic peptide corresponding to residues 412–423 of the mouse hsp60. This peptide also induced significant responses in IFA-primed lymph node cells but not in lymphoid cells from unimmunized mice. These results demonstrate that T cells specific for epitopes in self hsp60 are activated during inflammatory responses induced in the absence of exogenous bacterial hsp65. The findings of this study may provide a basis for understanding the often reported isolation of mycobacterial hsp65-responsive T cells from inflammatory sites of arthritis patients, and the protective effects of preimmunization with hsp65 in experimental models of arthritis.  相似文献   

17.
We have previously shown in mice and monkeys that mycobacterial heat shock proteins (hsp) of 65 and 70 kD exert a strong in vivo helper effect when conjugated to synthetic peptides or bacterial oligosaccharides and given in the absence of any adjuvants. Considering the degree of homology existing in the phylogeny among hsp belonging to the same family, we studied whether antibodies induced in mice with this protocol of immunization with the mycobacterial 65-kD hsp (hsp65) would cross-react, and to what extent, with hsp homologues from other origins, notably with the Escherichia coli GroEL protein and with the human homologue (hsp60). The results obtained show that antibodies to the mycobacterial hsp65 cross-reacted with the E. coli GroEL protein, both in ELISA and Western blot experiments, but not with the human hsp60. In competitive ELISA experiments, the binding of these antibodies to solid-phase hsp65 was very effectively inhibited by low concentrations of the mycobacterial hsp65; however, for human hsp60, 100 times higher concentrations were required in order to obtain similar patterns of inhibition. Finally, murine antibodies to the mycobacterial hsp65 always failed to give positive results in Western blot experiments using extracts of murine cells. Taken together, these data suggest that, after immunization of mice with the mycobacterial hsp65 conjugated to peptides or oligosaccharides in the absence of adjuvants, anti-hsp65 antibodies are induced which cross-react well with hsp homologues from other prokaryotes (e.g. E. coli GroEL), but which weakly bind the human hsp homologue. These results may have implications for the potential use of microbial hsp molecules in the design of conjugated vaccine constructs.  相似文献   

18.
Natural antibodies to 65 kD heat shock protein (hsp65) of Mycobacterium bovis were found in the sera of Lewis rats. The levels of these natural hsp65 antibodies differed substantially between the individual rats. Each rat was subsequently tested for its susceptibility to develop arthritis following injection of M. tuberculosis in incomplete Freund adjuvant. It was found that the incidence and severity of the induced arthritis did not differ between groups of Lewis rats with relatively high and relatively low natural antibody levels to hsp65. Inoculation of rats without natural antibodies to hsp65 with intestinal contents did not induce hsp65 antibodies, although the rats were able to respond to the antigen.  相似文献   

19.
Y Matsumoto  K Kawai  Y Tomita    M Fujiwara 《Immunology》1990,69(2):215-221
Susceptibility to experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), which is an autoimmune disease inducible by immunization with a brain-specific antigen in complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA), is different among strains. In an attempt to resolve the immune mechanisms by which the difference in susceptibility to EAE is regulated, we re-estimated susceptibility of several strains of rats, and the frequency of antigen-reactive T cells in each strain was determined by limiting-dilution analysis. EAE was induced in Lewis (LEW), PVG/c and BN rats using four different methods: (i) active immunization with guinea-pig myelin basic protein (GPBP) in CFA; (ii) immunization with GPBP in CFA that had been further supplemented with Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Ra (supplemented CFA); (iii) adoptive transfer of GPBP-activated spleen cells into syngeneic rats; and (iv) transfer of a GPBP-specific T-cell line. The LEW strain was susceptible to all four methods. The PVG/c strain was resistant to immunization with GPBP in conventional CFA (GPBP/conv. CFA), but was susceptible to immunization with GPBP in supplemented CFA (GPBP/suppl. CFA) and to transfer of activated spleen cells. The BN strain was resistant to all methods. Limiting-dilution analysis using T cells from LEW, PVG/c or BN rats has revealed that each strain of rat displays a different pattern of frequencies of GPBP-reactive or the 68-88 sequence (GP68-88)-reactive T cells. LEW rats showed relatively high frequencies of GPBP-reactive and GP68-88-reactive T cells after immunization with either GPBP/conv. CFA or GPBP/suppl. CFA, symptomatic rats showing higher values than asymptomatic rats. In asymptomatic PVG/c rats, the frequency of GP68-88-reactive T cells was lower than that of GPBP-reactive T cells. In PVG/c rats with clinical EAE, however, GP68-88-reactive T cells increased in frequency and were almost the same as GPBP-reactive T cells. BN rats, on the other hand, responded very poorly not only to the GP68-88 sequence but also to the whole GPBP molecule, even after immunization with GPBP/suppl. CFA. These findings, obtained by limiting-dilution analysis, strongly suggest that the development of EAE in LEW, PVG/c and BN rats is closely related to the frequency of GPBP-reactive T cells. Furthermore, it is shown that resistance to EAE found in PVG/c and BN rats may be generated by different immune mechanisms.  相似文献   

20.
The heat shock protein, hsp10, is an abundant protein in Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), its nucleotide sequence encoding a protein of 99 amino acids with a molecular mass of 10±7kD. This sequence is phylogenetically conserved, being represented by the GroES homologue of Escherichia coli. Hsp 10 and GroES are members of the chaperonin 10 family of molecular chaperones, and GroES is necessary for the optimal activity of GroEL, a member of the chaperonin 60 family and the E coli homologue of mycobacterial hsp65. Since hsp65 has been implicated in both experimental and human rheumatoid arthritis, we aimed to assess the immunomodulatory effects of its co-chaperonin, hsp10, in experimental arthritis. Our results show that an aqueous solution of a mycobacterial hsp10 delayed the onset and severity of adjuvant-induced arthritis in rodents when administered after disease induction but before joint involvement occurred. This biological activity was specific for the hsp10 of Mtb, since neither GroES nor the rat homologue was effective. Using synthetic hsp10 fragments, the activity was localized to the N-terminal region of the molecule. Assessment of circulating antibody levels to mycobacterial hsp10 and hsp65 indicated that all arthritic rats had increased litres to both hsp10 and hsp65: hsp10-treated rats showed further elevation of this humoral response not only to hsp10 but also to hsp65 when compared with the untreated arthritic control. This is the first report of the immunomodulatory activity of mycobacterial hsp10 in experimental arthritis, and exhibits a potential role for this co-chaperonin in pathophysiological situations.  相似文献   

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