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BAFF overexpression and accelerated glomerular disease in mice with an incomplete genetic predisposition to systemic lupus erythematosus

✍ Scribed by William Stohl; Dong Xu; Kyoung Soo Kim; Michael N. Koss; Trine N. Jorgensen; Bisram Deocharan; Troy E. Metzger; Sarah A. Bixler; Yeon Sik Hong; Christine M. Ambrose; Fabienne Mackay; Laurence Morel; Chaim Putterman; Brian L. Kotzin; Susan L. Kalled


Book ID
101650033
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Weight
241 KB
Volume
52
Category
Article
ISSN
0004-3591

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Objective

To determine whether overexpression of BAFF can accelerate the development of systemic lupus erythematosus–associated end‐organ disease in hosts with an underlying autoimmune diathesis.

Methods

We introduced a BAFF transgene (Tg) into autoimmune‐prone B6.Sle1 and B6.Nba2 mice and evaluated these mice for serologic autoimmunity and renal pathology.

Results

B6.Sle1.BAFF and B6.Nba2.BAFF mice, but not non‐Tg littermates, frequently developed severe glomerular pathology by 3 months of age. Age‐matched B6.BAFF mice, despite renal Ig deposits and increases in B cells and Ig production similar to those in B6.Sle1.BAFF and B6.Nba2.BAFF mice, did not develop glomerular pathology. In B6.Sle1.BAFF and B6.Nba2.BAFF mice, severity of glomerular disease did not obligately correlate with circulating levels of IgG antichromatin and/or anti–double‐stranded DNA antibodies or with amounts of these autoantibodies deposited in the kidneys. Even in mice with severe glomerular disease, renal tubulointerstitial infiltrates were very limited, and increased proteinuria was not detected.

Conclusion

BAFF‐driven effects on glomerular pathology may be mediated, at least in part, by autoantibodies with specificities other than chromatin and/or by autoantibody‐independent means. There is an uncoupling of BAFF‐driven precocious glomerular pathology from concomitant development of clinically apparent renal disease, strongly suggesting that BAFF overexpression works in concert with other factors to promote overt renal disease.