Causes and mechanism of autoimmune disease: cyclosporin A as a probe for the investigation.

Organ-specific autoimmune disease can be elicited in rodents by manipulating the thymus/T cells. For example, elimination of a particular T-cell subset causes organ-specific autoimmune diseases, such as thyroiditis and gastritis, in otherwise normal mice. Environmental agents can cause similar autoimmune diseases by affecting the thymus/T cells. Cyclosporin A (CsA), a potent immunosuppressive drug, is an example. When a particular strain of newborn mice are daily administered with CsA for a limited period, they spontaneously develop organ-specific autoimmune disease, such as gastritis with anti-parietal cell autoantibodies, later in life. CsA abrogates the production of CD4+T cells and CD8+T cells in the thymus. Consequently, these T cells are substantially depleted from the peripheral lymphoid organs, especially when the drug is administered from the day of birth. The autoimmune disease is prevented when CsA-treated newborn mice are inoculated with splenic T cells from normal syngeneic adult mice. On the other hand, removal of the thymus immediately after neonatal CsA treatment produces autoimmune disease with a higher incidence and in a wider spectrum of organs, i.e., thyroiditis, sialoadenitis of the salivary gland, gastritis, insulitis of the endocrine pancreas, adrenalitis, oophoritis, or orchitis. Each autoimmune disease is accompanied by the development of circulating autoantibodies specific for the corresponding organ-specific antigens. These findings taken together indicate that CsA causes autoimmune disease not by affecting the target self-antigens, but by interfering with a thymus/T cell-dependent control mechanism on the production/expansion of pathogenic self-reactive T cells. Various other environmental insults (such as ionizing radiation or virus) can also cause similar autoimmune diseases, presumably by a similar mechanism.

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