Brief Definitive Report |
Address correspondence to C. Benoist and D. Mathis, Joslin Diabetes Center, Harvard Medical School, One Joslin Place, Boston, MA 02215. Phone: 617-264-2743. Fax: 617-264-2744; E-mail: dm{at}joslin.harvard.edu
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Abstract |
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Key Words: autoimmunity arthritis autoantibodies glucose-6-phosphate isomerase mouse model
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Introduction |
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K/BxN TCR transgenic (tg) mice express a transgene-encoded TCR reactive to a self-peptide derived from the ubiquitously expressed glycolytic enzyme, glucose-6-phosphate isomerase, presented by the MHC class II molecule Ag7 (79). These animals spontaneously develop a very aggressive form of arthritis, beginning at 3 to 4 wk of age. As in humans, the disease is chronic, progressive, and symmetrical, and it exhibits all of the classical histological features: leukocyte invasion, synovitis, pannus formation, cartilage, and bone destruction. The articular manifestations are the result of arthritogenic Abs directed against GPI, which develop at high titers in K/BxN mice because of the preferential help that B cells expressing GPI-specific Igs receive from GPI-reactive T cells displaying the transgene-encoded TCR. Affinity-purified anti-GPI IgG from these mice can transfer disease to healthy recipients in the absence of any lymphocytes.
A great paradox in the K/BxN model is the exquisite specificity of the joint attack provoked by the auto-Abs, reactive against a ubiquitously expressed antigen. GPI is a cytoplasmic enzyme, essential for basic carbohydrate metabolism, and is normally sequestered in the cell cytoplasm, only being released in the circulation in minute amounts in conditions that involve cell damage or apoptosis (for refs, see reference 9). One possible resolution to the paradox is that the anti-GPI Abs are cross-reactive to a joint-specific antigen. It was therefore important to analyze the specificity of the anti-GPI response. We derived hybridomas from K/BxN mice, screening for anti-GPI reactivity by an ELISA; we report the molecular and biophysical properties of a panel of anti-GPI mAbs, in relation to their capacity to induce arthritis.
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Materials and Methods |
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mAbs.
Hybridomas producing anti-GPI mAbs were generated using standard procedures. Single-cell suspensions were prepared from different organs of arthritic K/BxN mice of different ages and, without prior culture or stimulation, were fused to the nonsecreting myeloma cell line P3X63-AG8.653. The primary plates were screened for Ab production by ELISA against recombinant GPI. Positive wells were subcloned two or three times by limiting dilution and selection for GPI reactivity, and were expanded. mAbs were purified from supernatants on protein G Sepharose (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech), and bound IgG was eluted in 0.1 M glycine (pH 2.8) and quickly neutralized with 1/6 volume of 1 M Tris HCl (pH 8.5). The eluted fractions were concentrated and switched to PBS buffer by centrifugation (Centricon-30; Amicon) and then titered by ELISA for anti-GPI activity. Heavy and light chain VDJ regions were sequenced from amplified mRNA (see online supplemental data).
ELISAs were performed as described (9). Briefly, 96-well flat-bottom ELISA plates (Maxisorb; Nunc) were coated with 5 µg/ml of recombinant GPI as a fusion protein with glutathione S-transferase (GST) (9) or 5 µg of GST in PBS at 4°C overnight. They were then blocked with bovine BSA, incubated with the supernatant, washed, and incubated with alkaline phosphatasecoupled Abs to mouse total IgG (or, when appropriate, with isotype-specific anti-IgG1, -IgG2a, -IgG2b, or -IgG3 reagents [Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories]).
Arthritis Transfer.
Sera from paired lots of K/BxN mice or control BxN littermates (40 to 60 d of age) were pooled and injected intraperitoneally, in 150250 µl total volume (adjusted with PBS if necessary). In most cases, recipients got two injections at a two-day interval. Purified mAbs were also injected at a 2 d interval. Arthritis was scored by clinical examination (clinical index as described [10], caliper measurement of ankle thickness [7, 11]).
Surface Plasmon Resonance Analyses.
Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) measurements were performed with a BIAcore 2000 (Biacore) as detailed in oneline supplemental data, with rabbit antimouse Fc or anti-GPI mAbs immobilized on the sensor chip via amino groups (12). Soluble rGPI (9) was injected in the fluid phase, and data were fitted to 1:1 Langmuir binding or to two-state conformational change models (BIA evaluation 3.0 software). For the two-Ab assays, the capturing anti-GPI mAb1 was directly immobilized on the sensor chip at high density (3 to 10 kRU). GPI was injected for 10 min, and the mAb-GPI complexes washed, leaving stable mAb1GPI complexes. The second mAb2 was then injected, and its binding quantitated as the molar ratio (MR) of the reactant by the following relationship: (MR = [RUmAb/ RUAg]) x [MWAg/MWmAb]) (13).
Online Supplemental Data Section.
Online supplemental material is available at http://www.jem.org/cgi/content/full/jem.20011941/DC1
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Results and Discussion |
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In contrast to spleen, much more modest frequencies of anti-GPI hybridomas resulted from fusions of lymph node or bone marrow cells (Table I). Attempts were also made to fuse lymphocytes from the synovial fluid of arthritic joints, but few wells showed hybridoma growth, and these were not GPI-reactive (not shown), consistent with the low abundance of B cells in the K/BxN arthritic lesion. Thus, the spleen appears to be the main site of production of anti-GPI Abs in this model.
Arthritogenic Activity of mAbs.
The pathogenic potential of these mAbs was then tested. In pilot studies, small-scale preparations of Igs were made from minimally expanded uncloned hybridomas; in other experiments, the hybridoma cells were transferred directly into irradiated mice. No arthritic recipients were ever observed, testing an aggregate of 40 GPI-reactive hybridomas. In parallel, a panel of hybridomas was selected and subcloned twice by limiting dilution. Secreted IgG was purified and tested for arthritogenic activity by injection into naive Balb/c recipients, using regimens and doses that consistently gave disease with affinity-purified serum anti-GPI IgG. Balb/c was the recipient of choice because, of the common strains, it shows the highest susceptibility to K/BxN serum-induced arthritis (11). Again, none of the individual mAbs could induce either clinical symptoms of arthritis or histological manifestation of a joint disorder (Table II).
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To test which mAbs were most effective at complementing each other, we injected all 36 possible pairwise combinations into Balb/c recipients (Fig. 2 A). Only 10 of these were able to provoke clinical symptoms of disease, which in some cases reached the maximum score of 4 and showed the typical histological alterations described above. However, whereas the injection of serum Ig or larger pools caused aggressive disease in nearly 100% of the recipients, such a high incidence was never achieved with the mAb pairs; rather, when arthritis could be induced, it showed partial penetrance. With the marked exception of the two IgG2b mAbs, all individual Abs within the pool participated to at least some extent in arthritogenic pairs.
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Kinetics and Affinity of the Anti-GPI mAbs.
To generate clues about why some mAb pairs, but apparently not others, could complement for arthritis induction, we measured the binding kinetics and GPI affinity of the nine mAbs via Biacore analysis.
First, experimental conditions were optimized to limit the complexity of the analyzed interaction. To eliminate mass transport as a limiting factor, we captured small quantities of mAbs (100 RU) on anti-Fc surfaces. Before kinetic runs, each mAb surface was tested by injecting the lowest concentration of GPI, at variable flow rates. Flow rates had no effect on binding rates, indicating that mass transport limitations were not an issue (15). The nine mAbs were analyzed by measuring the binding of soluble GPI injected in the fluid phase (Table III; online supplemental data). In general, all mAbs had a high affinity for GPI, with a Kd of 5 x 10-8 M or better. Simple 1:1 Langmuir binding models fit readily the curves of two sets of mAbs: one group ("low koff" mAbs), which includes mAbs 2.56, 6.149, 1.8, and 6.96, formed complexes with GPI with a half-life of 1/2 h. A second group ("very low koff" mAbs), consisting of 6.65 and 1.24, formed complexes more stable by an order of magnitude. A third set included mAbs 2.67, 6.121, and 2.99, whose interaction with GPI was more complex, a two-state reaction involving a conformational change that stabilizes the complex (A + B
AB
AB*) giving the best fit with the experimental data.
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As a minimum of two mAbs was needed to provoke disease, an immediate question was whether simultaneous binding of these arthritogenic pairs to GPI was required to initiate the events culminating in joint inflammation, or whether complementing but uncoordinated binding of different molecules was involved. The former would be necessary should complementation function by inducing cross-linking of GPI into multivalent complexes. Therefore, dual interactions were examined. Saturating amounts of capture mAb (mAb1) were first immobilized, and stable complexes were formed by injecting GPI. A second mAb (mAb2) was then injected and its interaction with the mAb1GPI complex evaluated; the signal increment due to the binding of mAb2 was expressed as molar ratio (MR) values (Fig. 2 B).
Some mAb pairs were mutually incompatible (MR of 0; for example 2.67/6.121, or 2.99/6.96), most likely due to overlapping epitopes. On the other hand, many of the mAb pairs were characterized by a significant MR, indicating that they could bind simultaneously to GPI. Most of these interactions were symmetrical, as would have been predicted, although this was not always the case. In some instances, it was important which Ab bound to GPI first: for example, 1.24 could bind to the 2.67GPI complex, but the opposite did not happen. The epitope map resolved the mAbs into four groups. According to the Mr criterion, mAbs 2.67, 1.8, and 6.121 could be grouped together, as they bound to the same cluster of epitopes, showing a similar, although slightly different, pattern of recognition. The second group corresponded to mAbs 2.99 and 6.96, while mAbs 6.65 and 1.24 were distinct. From competitive ELISA results (not shown), 6.149 would belong to the same group as 1.24. Comparison of these cobinding patterns with the pathogenicity of individual pairs (Fig. 2 B) clearly showed that corecognition of the same GPI molecule was required for arthritogenesis: none of the cross-blocking pairs induced disease.
As illustrated above, the more individual Abs injected, the more robust the disease. The data rule out several potential explanations for this phenomenon. First, it does not reflect a need for effector functions mediated by Abs of different isotypes, as IgG1 mAbs alone sufficed. Nor does it reflect epitope unmasking and cooperative binding rather, if anything, the opposite. On the other hand, these pathogenic mAbs had to bind GPI simultaneously, and the improvement in disease induction with increasing mAb number implies that large multimeric complexes must be formed. This notion of large Ab/Ag complexes is consistent with recent observations demonstrating the requirement for two major inflammatory effector arms in K/BxN arthritis: complement activation and FcR signaling (10). Complement activation is enhanced by Ig deposition and immune complexes, and the cross-linking of multiple FcRs by immobilized Igs arrays is most effective at initiating a functional response (16). As discussed elsewhere (17), multimerization may correspond either to deposition of preformed complexes that can be found circulating in the serum of K/BxN mice, or to multimeric stabilization of arrayed GPI on joint surfaces. Whichever the explanation (or both?), the data presented here indicate that multimerization of GPI/anti-GPI complexes is an essential component of K/BxN pathology.
Dual-binding assays showed that mAb pairs that could not bind simultaneously were ineffective at inducing arthritis. However, there was no explanation for other pairs that were capable of simultaneous binding yet were ineffective at inducing arthritis. These pairs might induce an infrequent disease that would not have been detected with the limited groups involved. They might also fall just below the threshold for productive activation none of the mAb pairs was very efficient in any case. Or, more interestingly, the relative molecular angles adopted by these mAb1-GPI-mAb2 complexes might preclude assembly into larger lattices. These negative results must be treated with a certain degree of caution, however, as these combinations were not tested extensively.
The requirement for more than one mAb for disease induction has also been described in another mouse model of arthritis: a minimum combination of three anti-collagen II mAbs was needed to provoke collagen-induced arthritis (CIA; reference 6), suggesting that similar effector mechanisms might be involved in the two models. This is consistent with the fact that genetic factors that influence arthritis in the K/BxN and CIA models appear quite similar (18, 19). However, there are some interesting differences in the effects of mAbs in the two cases. First, there is obviously far more collagen-II than GPI in the joint, and so one might have expected anti-collagen to be more effective than anti-GPI at eliciting inflammation. But the opposite was true, as the doses of Ig required for the latter were markedly lower than the 10 mg of anti-collagen mAbs routinely used. Second, the dominant and most efficient isotype of anti-GPI mAbs was IgG1, while the best results were obtained with a cocktail of IgG2a and IgG2b anti-collagen mAbs (6), in keeping with earlier observations that IgG2 subclasses correlated with CIA pathology (20).
Ig Gene Usage.
VH and VL nucleotide sequences were determined for the nine anti-GPI mAbs by PCR amplification with degenerate primer, followed by sequencing of the PCR products (results presented in the online supplemental data). As the mAbs were derived from the spleens of several different mice, most should have been clonally independent. The sequences confirmed this, none of the heavy or light chain sequences of the nine mAbs being identical to another. On the other hand, there are distinct similarities between the heavy chains: six are encoded by genes derived from the VH1 family (aka J558), particularly intriguing as the VHs used in 1.8, 6.121, 2.56, and 2.67 all stem from subgroup 20; in addition, 6.149 and 6.96 are both encoded by the VH14 gene (aka SM7). V gene usage shows no such restrictions, since 5 different V
gene families encode the light chains of 8 of the anti-GPI mAbs in the pool.
The VH and VL sequences were compared with the germline genes. A large number of mutations is observed (from 3 to 36, median 18), the majority leading to amino acid replacements (online supplemental data). It is not possible to conclude with certainty that any single mutation arose from somatic mutation, because the germline sequences could have arisen from either the B6 or NOD Ig loci of the donor K/BxN mice. On the other hand, that none of the sequences is identical or even closely related to any of the database germline sequences is certainly indicative of a high overall degree of somatic mutation. Perhaps the clearest example entails mAbs 6.149 and 6.96: they originated from the same mouse, and their heavy chain genes are clearly related, as the CDR3 joining regions are identical; yet, they show four nucleotide differences. This finding suggests a common IgH rearrangement event and later divergence by somatic mutation. Interestingly, sequences of anti-GPI Fabs from human RA patients also indicated somatic mutation (21).
Conclusion.
These findings finalize the identification of GPI as the true target of the arthritogenic Igs in K/BxN mice. First, the fact that arthritis could be induced by the injection of pooled mAbs grown in vitro rules out the possibility that any serum-derived contaminant, cofractionated during the affinity purification of anti-GPI IgG (9), causes the joint lesions. Second, earlier results did not definitively eliminate the possibility that the anti-GPI Igs cross-reacted with another, joint-specific, molecule, although no such molecule could be detected (9). However, the fact that seven different anti-GPI mAbs reactive against at least four distinct epitopes could participate in arthritis induction renders such an explanation highly unlikely it is difficult to conceive of how there could be cross-reactivity between this entire quartet and elements of another molecular species. Instead, multimeric crosslinking by high-affiny antibodies seems at the root of K/BxN arthritis.
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Acknowledgments |
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This work was supported by grants from the Association pour la Recherche contre la Polyarthrite and the National Institutes of Health (1R01 AR/AI46580-01) to D. Mathis and C. Benoist. M. Maccione received a fellowship from the Fondation pour la Recherche Medicale and CONICET and H. Huang from the Cancer Research Fund of the Damon Runyon-Walter Winchell Foundation (DRG-1616).
Submitted: November 20, 2001
Revised: January 30, 2002
Accepted: February 15, 2002
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Footnotes |
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M. Maccioni's present address is Depto de Bioquímica Clínica, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Córdoba 5000, Argentina.
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References |
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