Abstract
Lethally x-irradiated Lewis rats, reconstituted with syngeneic bone marrow and transiently treated with CsA for 4 weeks, will develop an autoimmune disease about 2–3 weeks after cessation of CsA therapy. CsA-induced autoimmunity is a thymus-dependent and T cell-mediated autoimmune disease. CsA is thought to generate autoreactive T cells by interference with negative selection in the thymus; x-irradiation is required to eliminate the peripheral autoregulatory T cell circuit. In this study we re-evaluate the effect of CsA on thymic atrophy and thymocyte maturation. Subsequently we examine the expression of costimulatory and activation molecules (CD2, CD5, CD11a, CD11b, CD25, CD28, CD43, CD54, OX-40, RT-1A, RT-1B and RT-1D) during distinct maturational stages in order to detect possible clues to the observed effects of CsA on thymocyte maturation and selection. The results revealed that CsA blocks maturation of double-positive TCRint to double-positive TCRhigh thymocytes and preferentially inhibits the development of mature CD4 single-positive thymocytes. Furthermore, CsA administration resulted in a reduced expression of the costimulatory CD2 molecule. Although it is a matter of debate whether this defective CD2 expression is involved in the aberrant maturation and selection of thymocytes, it is speculated that reduced costimulation via CD2 may influence differentiation into distinct T cell subsets.
Keywords: thymus, cyclosporin A, rat, autoimmunity, costimulation, CD2
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