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Journal ArticleDOI

Immunological characterization of C3H mice congenic for Fas(lprcg), C3h/HeJ-Fas(lprcg)/Fas(lprcg).

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TLDR
The results indicate that the death signal through the deathdomain of Fas is responsible for lymphoproliferation due to the accumulation of DN T cells and suggest that the region of Fas outside the death domain may be involved in autoantibody production.
Abstract
Fas(lpr) (lpr) and Fas(lprcg) (lpr(cg)) are allelic mutations of the Fas gene that is involved in apoptosis or programmed cell death. Lpr greatly reduces the expression of functional Fas and lpr(cg) expresses the death domain-disabled, non-functional Fas on the cell surface. C3H/HeJ mice congenic for lpr(cg) (C3H-lpr(cg)) were established and compared with C3H/HeJ-lpr/lpr (C3H-lpr) mice for their immunological and pathological features. Lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, development of CD4- CD8- B220+ or double-negative (DN) T cells, renal pathology, and lymphoid cell infiltration in the lung and liver were not significantly different between C3H-lpr(cg) and C3H-lpr mice. Noticeably, however, the production of serum immunoglobulin, autoantibodies against double-strand DNA and serum immune complexes were significantly lower in C3H-lpr(cg) than in C3H-lpr mice. The results indicate that the death signal through the death domain of Fas is responsible for lymphoproliferation due to the accumulation of DN T cells and suggest that the region of Fas outside the death domain may be involved in autoantibody production. The newly-developed congenic C3H-lpr(cg) mice will provide a powerful tool for research into the function of Fas apart from apoptosis.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Induction of apoptosis and activation of NF-κB by CD95 require different signalling thresholds

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that induction of apoptosis requires two wild‐type alleles of CD95, at the same time allowing induction of survival or proliferative pathways, which could contribute to the increased risk for lymphoma seen in ALPS type Ia patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mesenchymal stem cell transplantation can restore lupus disease-associated miRNA expression and Th1/Th2 ratios in a murine model of SLE

TL;DR: Treatment with cyclophosphamide or ASC can change miRNAs and decrease miR-96-5p and miR+5p expression, as well as decreasing the CD138 proportion and the Th1/Th2 ratio, which might be involved in the therapeutic mechanism.
Journal ArticleDOI

CD95 signaling deficient mice with a wild-type hematopoietic system are prone to hepatic neoplasia.

TL;DR: A gene chip analysis identified genes selectively upregulated in the liver of wt and wt/lprcg mice which may protect these mice from developing liver cancer, the first case of CD95 protecting from developing a solid cancer.
Journal ArticleDOI

CD95 apoptosis resistance in certain cells can be overcome by noncanonical activation of caspase-8.

TL;DR: It is reported that tumor cells expressing a CD95 allele that lacks a functional DD, splenocytes from heterozygous lprcg mice, and Type I tumor cells stimulated with soluble CD95L can all die through CD95 when protein synthesis or nuclear factor kappa B is inhibited.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Fas Death Factor

TL;DR: Fas ligand (FasL), a cell surface molecule belonging to the tumor necrosis factor family, binds to its receptor Fas, thus inducing apoptosis of Fas-bearing cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lymphoproliferation disorder in mice explained by defects in Fas antigen that mediates apoptosis

TL;DR: The Ipr mice develop lymphadenopathy and suffer from a systemic lupus erythematosus-like autoimmune disease, indicating an important role for Fas antigen in the negative selection of autoreactive T cells in the thymus.
Book ChapterDOI

Murine models of systemic lupus erythematosus.

TL;DR: This chapter reviews the histopathologic, serologic, lymphocytic, virological, hormonal, and genetic characteristics of murine models of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) to support the statement that the final immunopathologic perturbation in murine (and human) SLE is a B lymphocyte hyperactivity with corresponding enhancement of serum antibodies and autoantibodies, particularly IgG.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lpr and gld: single gene models of systemic autoimmunity and lymphoproliferative disease.

TL;DR: The autosomal recessive lpr and gld genes induce in mice multiple autoantibodies and the progressive accumulation of large numbers of non-malignant CD4- CD8- T lymphocytes, and the mechanism whereby these two genes induce autoimmunity and lymphoproliferation remains obscure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fas and Fas ligand: lpr and gld mutations

TL;DR: The physiological role of the Fas system in T-cell development, cytotoxicity and cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL)-mediated autoimmune disease is discussed and current knowledge of Fas and FasL is summarized.
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