Published in

American Association of Immunologists, The Journal of Immunology, 5(153), p. 2313-2320, 1994

DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.153.5.2313

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Prevention of mercuric chloride-induced nephritis in the brown Norway rat by treatment with antibodies against the alpha 4 integrin.

Journal article published in 1994 by A. Molina, F. Sánchez Madrid ORCID, T. Bricio, A. Martín, A. Barat, V. Alvarez, F. Mampaso
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Abstract HgCl2 induces the synthesis of anti-GBM Abs with the development of glomerular and interstitial nephritis, as well as proteinuria, in the Brown Norway rat. The development of this autoimmune disease is a consequence of the appearance of an autoreactive T cell subset-inducing activation of B cells. The administration to mercury-treated rats of the mouse anti-human VLA alpha 4 HP2/1 mAb, which cross-reacts with the rat homologue integrin, completely abrogated the interstitial cell infiltrates. As demonstrated by peripheral blood analysis, this effect is not a result of the depletion of circulating leukocytes or leukocyte subsets. Interestingly, the administration of Abs specific for the alpha 4 integrin also highly reduced anti-GBM Ab synthesis, thus preventing detectable glomerular deposits and proteinuria. Our results confirm that in vivo alpha 4 functions in adhesive interaction of circulating leukocytes and vascular endothelium, and is centrally important in the extravasation and migration of T lymphocytes to sites of tissue injury. We also found a complete absence of interstitial cell infiltrates, together with a positive glomerular IgG lineal deposition pattern, when anti-GBM Abs were passively transferred to rats pretreated with anti-alpha 4 mAb, thus indicating an independent role of alpha 4 integrin in both extravasation of immune cells and production of autoantibodies. Furthermore, these in vivo findings provide preliminary evidence for the participation of the VLA-4 integrin in mediating the intercellular interaction of leukocytes regulating the production of Abs, most likely through the existence of additional yet unknown ligand(s).