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American Journal of Pathology, Vol 138, 1209-1223, Copyright © 1991 by American Society for Investigative Pathology
REGULAR ARTICLES |
EL Khoury, L Pereira and FS Greenspan
Division of Oral Biology, University of California, San Francisco 94115.
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection of primary cultures established from human thyroid nodular and normal (paranodular) tissues resulted in induction of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) DR expression on thyroid follicular cells (TFC), as detected by cell-surface immunofluorescence staining with monoclonal antibodies (MAb). Two distinct modalities of induction were observed. The first type occurred in cultures of normal tissue obtained from CMV-seropositive but not seronegative donors, was detected on 30% to 50% of the TFCs, even though the vast majority of these cells failed to show any morphologic or antigenic evidence of individual CMV infection, and was associated with production of gamma- interferon (gamma-IFN) in vitro. The induced molecules displayed the characteristic DR polypeptide profile on immunoprecipitation and electrophoretic analysis. These results demonstrate that CMV infection of normal thyroid cultures may induce DR expression on TFCs in the absence of pre-existing lymphoid infiltrates and suggest that the induction is the result of an in vitro response to CMV by previously sensitized immunocompetent cells present in these primary cultures. Such a response, associated with the release of gamma-IFN, would induce DR expression on neighboring uninfected cells. The second mode of induction occurred in all CMV-infected cultures, regardless of their tissue origin (nodular or normal) or the serologic status of the donors. Up to 50% of infected TFCs at a late stage of infection, having fully developed CMV antigen-positive intranuclear inclusions, also displayed the cell-surface DR-related determinant recognized by one of the four anti-DR MAbs used. This induction was restricted to TFCs, while CMV-infected fibroblastoid cells present in the monolayers were invariably negative. Induction by CMV of major histocompatibility class II antigens on human epithelial cells may have significant implications in the development of normal immune responses against local viral infection, the enhancement of alloimmune rejection of grafted organs, and the generation of organ-specific autoimmune responses.
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