The Anti-DNA Knock-In Model of Systemic Autoimmunity Induced by the Chronic Graft-vs-Host Reaction
The injection of spleen cells from bm12 mice into C57BL/6 recipients induces a c
The injection of spleen cells from bm12 mice into C57BL/6 recipients induces a chronic graft-vs-host reaction characterized by systemic autoimmunity, including anti-double-stranded DNA (anti-dsDNA) autoantibodies and immune complex-type proliferative glomerulonephritis. If the B6 recipient mice express an anti-DNA Vh site-directed transgene, the repertoire is skewed even more toward the anti-DNA response. Over a period of several weeks, high titers of serum anti-DNA antibodies appear and the mice develop renal damage. This permits the examination of the role of somatic immunoglobulin genetics and B-cell tolerance in a model of systemic lupus erythematosus.