Popis: |
Autoimmune arthritis can be induced in rats by immunization with cartilage-specific types II and XI collagen. Type XI collagen is composed of alpha 1(XI), alpha 2(XI), and alpha 3(XI) chains, in which alpha 3(XI) is essentially identical to alpha 1(II) of type II, and alpha 1(XI) and alpha 2(XI) are similar to alpha 1(V) and alpha 2(V) of type V collagen. To characterize the immune response to type XI collagen, Lewis rats were injected with bovine type XI collagen, and the cellular and humoral responses were compared with those of rats injected with types V and II collagen. Arthritis, IgG deposits in cartilage, and joint destruction were seen in rats immunized with types XI and II collagen. Type XI elicited strong cellular responses to rat types XI, V, and II; conversely, types II and V collagen elicited strong responses to rat type XI. Antitype XI Abs reacted with rat type XI, moderately with rat type V, but poorly with rat type II. Direct and inhibition ELISA showed that cross-reactions between types XI and V collagen resulted from recognition of determinants shared by their respective alpha 2(XI) and alpha 1(V) chains. Abs eluted from joints of rats immunized with type XI collagen, however, reacted only with native rat type XI collagen. These data demonstrate that type XI collagen induces diverse populations of Abs differing in collagen-type specificity, and suggest that only those Abs to native rat type XI collagen are central to the pathogenesis of type XI collagen-induced arthritis. |