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      β 2-microglobulin–deficient Mice Are Resistant to Bullous Pemphigoid

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          Abstract

          Recent understanding of the mechanism of immunoglobulin G (IgG) catabolism has yielded new insight into antibody-mediated diseases. We proposed that β 2-microglobulin (β 2m)–deficient mice have been protected from systemic lupus erythematosis (SLE)–like syndromes because they lack the β 2m-associated IgG protection receptor (FcRn) and therefore catabolize IgG, including pathogenic IgG autoantibodies, considerably more rapidly than normal mice. Such an hypothesis would predict that β 2m-deficient mice would also be resistant to experimental bullous pemphigoid, a disease with a pathogenesis thought to be much simpler than SLE, being the result of antibody directed toward a pathogenic epitope on the epidermal hemidesmosome that anchors basal keratinocytes to the basement membrane. To test this hypothesis, we administered pathogenic rabbit antibody directed toward the hemidesmosome to β 2m-deficient mice and to normal control mice, both intraperitoneally and intradermally, and assessed the mice clinically, histologically, and immunologically for manifestations of skin disease. We found that the β 2m-deficient mice were protected when the antibody was given intraperitoneally whereas intradermal administration resulted in blisters only slightly less severe than those seen in normal mice. These data would indicate that autoantibody-mediated inflammation might be prevented or controlled by appropriate modulation of FcRn function.

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          Most cited references35

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          Measurement of cutaneous inflammation: estimation of neutrophil content with an enzyme marker.

          We examined the hypothesis that myeloperoxidase (MPO), a plentiful constituent of neutrophils, might serve as a marker for tissue neutrophil content. To completely extract MPO from either neutrophils or skin, hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide (HTAB) was used to solubilize the enzyme. With this detergent treatment, 97.8 +/- 0.2% of total recoverable MPO was extracted from neutrophils with a single HTAB treatment; 93.1 +/- 1.0% was solubilized with a single treatment of skin. Neutrophil MPO was directly related to neutrophil number; with the dianisidine-H2O2 assay as few as 10(4) neutrophils could be detected. The background level of MPO within uninflamed tissue was 0.385 +/- 0.018 units per gram of tissue, equivalent to only 7.64 +/- 0.36 X 10(5) neutrophils. In experimental staphylococcal infection, skin specimens contained 34.8 +/- 3.8 units MPO per gram, equivalent to 8.55 +/- 0.93 X 10(7) neutrophils. These studies demonstrate that MPO can be used as a marker for skin neutrophil content: it is recoverable from skin in soluble form, and is directly related to neutrophil number. Further, normal skin possesses a low background of MPO compared to that of inflamed skin.
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            An Fc receptor structurally related to MHC class I antigens.

            Maternal immunoglobulin G transmitted to the fetus or newborn provides humoral immunity for the first weeks of mammalian life. Fc receptors on intestinal epithelial cells of the neonatal rat (FcRn) mediate the uptake of IgG from milk. Affinity-purified FcRn is resolved by SDS-PAGE into components of relative molecular masses 45,000-53,000 (p51) and about 14,000 (p14). We report the identification of the smaller component as beta 2-microglobulin. Association of beta 2-microglobulin with p51 was confirmed by crosslinking in intestinal epithelial cell brush borders. We have cloned a cDNA encoding the presumptive Fc-binding subunit, p51, and its predicted primary structure has three extracellular domains and a transmembrane region which are all homologous to the corresponding domains of class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC) antigens. This is the first time a function has been assigned to an MHC antigen-related molecule.
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              Abnormally short serum half-lives of IgG in beta 2-microglobulin-deficient mice.

              The MHC class I-related receptor, FcRn, mediates the transfer of maternal gamma globulin (IgG) to young rodents, primarily via intestinal transcytosis, and this provides humoral immunity for the first few weeks after birth. In a previous study, the site of mouse IgG1 (mIgG1) with which FcRn interacts has been mapped using recombinant wild-type and mutated Fc-hinge fragments. The site encompasses residues at the CH2-CH3 domain interface of Fc (Ile253, His310, Gln311, His433 and Asn434) and the same amino acids are involved in regulating the pharmacokinetics of the Fc-hinge fragments. This suggests that in addition to its known function, FcRn might also play a role in IgG homeostasis. Consistent with this hypothesis, in this study, we demonstrate that FcRn alpha-chain mRNA is present not only in neonatal brush border but also in other tissues of adult animals (liver, lung, spleen and endothelial cells). In addition, analysis of the pharmacokinetics of mouse Ig/Fc-hinge fragments in genetically manipulated mice that are deficient in the expression of FcRn demonstrates that the beta-phase half-lives are abnormally short. These findings suggest that FcRn is involved in IgG homeostasis.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Exp Med
                The Journal of Experimental Medicine
                The Rockefeller University Press
                0022-1007
                1540-9538
                29 August 1997
                : 186
                : 5
                : 777-783
                Affiliations
                From the [* ]Department of Dermatology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 43226; []The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, Maine 04609; and the [§ ]Department of Internal Medicine and the []Department of Pathology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210
                Author notes

                Address correspondence to Dr. Liu, 8701 at the University of Wisconsin, Watertown Plank Rd., Milwaukee, WI 53226. Phone: 414-456-4082; FAX: 414-266-8673; E-mail: zhiliu@ 123456post.its.mcw.edu ; Dr. Roopenian, The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, ME 04609. Phone: 207-288-6396; FAX: 207-288-6079; E-mail: dcr@ 123456aretha.jax.org ; and Dr. Anderson, 2054 Davis Research Center, 480 West Ninth Ave. Phone: 614-293-4819; FAX: 614-293-5631; E-mail: anderson.48@ 123456osu.edu

                Article
                2199010
                9271593
                78a5cf8d-51aa-4d66-b10f-2915ceb50515
                Copyright @ 1997
                History
                : 18 March 1997
                : 27 May 1997
                Categories
                Article

                Medicine
                Medicine

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