Journal Article10.1111/imcb.12546
Development of organ‐specific autoimmunity by dysregulated Aire expression
Hitoshi Nishijima,Mizuki Sugita,Natsuka Umezawa,Naoki Kimura,Hirokazu Sasaki,Hiroshi Kawano,Yasuhiko Nishioka,Minoru Matsumoto,Takeshi Oya,Koichi Tsuneyama,Junko Morimoto,Mitsuru Matsumoto +11 more
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TL;DR: It is suggested that further analyses should be pursued to establish a novel link between organ‐specific autoimmune disease and dysregulated AIRE expression in clinical settings.
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Abstract: Deficiency for AIRE/Aire in both humans and mice results in the development of organ‐specific autoimmune disease. We tested whether augmented and/or dysregulated AIRE/Aire expression might be also prone to the breakdown of self‐tolerance. To define the effect of augmented Aire expression on the development of autoimmunity, antigen‐specific clonal deletion and production of clonotypic regulatory T cells (Tregs) in the thymus were examined using mice expressing two additional copies of Aire in a heterozygous state (3xAire‐knockin mice: 3xAire‐KI). We found that both clonal deletion of autoreactive T cells and production of clonotypic Tregs in the thymus from 3xAire‐KI were impaired in a T‐cell receptor‐transgenic system. Furthermore, 3xAire‐KI females showed higher scores of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis induced by myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein than wild‐type littermates, suggesting that augmented Aire expression exacerbates organ‐specific autoimmunity under disease‐prone conditions. In humans, we found that one patient with amyopathic dermatomyositis showed CD3–CD19– cells expressing AIRE in the peripheral blood before the treatment but not during the remission phase treated with immunosuppressive drugs. Thus, not only loss of function of AIRE/Aire but also augmented and/or dysregulated expression of AIRE/Aire should be considered for the pathogenesis of organ‐specific autoimmunity. We suggest that further analyses should be pursued to establish a novel link between organ‐specific autoimmune disease and dysregulated AIRE expression in clinical settings.
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Citations
SKI Regulates Medullary Thymic Epithelial Cell Differentiation to Control Peripheral T Cell Responses in Mice.
Honyin Chiu,Kristin N Weinstein,Sabine Spath,Alex Hu,Stephanie Varela,Kazushige Obata-Ninomiya,Steven F Ziegler +6 more
TL;DR: SKI regulates the differentiation and function of medullary thymic epithelial cells, thereby controlling peripheral T cell responses in mice.
Learning the Autoimmune Pathogenesis Through the Study of Aire.
Mitsuru Matsumoto,Minoru Matsumoto +1 more
TL;DR: Aire, a transcriptional regulator, is a key target for understanding autoimmune disease pathogenesis, with its dysfunction linked to self-tolerance breakdown; single-cell analysis and genetically modified animals aid in elucidating Aire's essential function and target genes.
Limb-girdle muscle dystrophy as a novel rare component of autoimmune polyglandular syndrome type 1
A. S. Bondarenko,Т. A. Dubovitskaya,В. В. Фадеев,Liudmila Rozhinskaya,Zhanna Belaya +4 more
References
Mode of Tolerance Induction and Requirement for Aire Are Governed by the Cell Types That Express Self-Antigen and Those That Present Antigen
Yasuhiro Mouri,Yoshihiro Ueda,Tomoyoshi Yamano,Minoru Matsumoto,Koichi Tsuneyama,Tatsuo Kinashi,Mitsuru Matsumoto,Mitsuru Matsumoto +7 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that the fate of autoreactive thymocytes together with the requirement for Aire depend on the cell types that express self-antigens and the types of APCs involved in tolerance induction.