Comparison of CpG s-ODNs, chromatin immune complexes, and dsDNA fragment immune complexes in the TLR9-dependent activation of rheumatoid factor B cells — Ann Marshak‐Rothstein (2004) | RDL Network
Comparison of CpG s-ODNs, chromatin immune complexes, and dsDNA fragment immune complexes in the TLR9-dependent activation of rheumatoid factor B cells
Journal of Endotoxin Research 10(4): 247-251
Article 2004 English
Authors
AM
Ann Marshak‐Rothstein
LB
Liliana Busconi
CL
Christina M. Lau
Abstract
1 min read
Synthetic single-stranded oligodeoxynucleotides (15—30 bp) containing CpG motifs and phosphorothioate backbones (CpG s-ODN), immune complexes consisting of anti-nucleosome mAbs and mammalian chromatin (chromatin IC), and immune complexes consisting of anti-hapten mAbs and haptenated-double stranded DNA fragments (~600 bp) can all effectively stimulate transgenic B cells expressing a rheumatoid factor receptor by a TLR9-dependent process. However, differential sensitivity to both s-ODN and small molecule inhibitors suggests that stimulatory CpG sODN and chromatin IC may either access TLR9 via different routes or depend on discrete activation parameters. These data have important implications regarding the therapeutic application of TLR9 inhibitors to the treatment of systemic autoimmune diseases.
Ann Marshak‐Rothstein, Liliana Busconi, Christina M. Lau, Abigail S. Tabor, Elizabeth A. Leadbetter, Akira Shizuo, Arthur Μ. Krieg, Grayson B. Lipford, Gregory A. Viglianti, Ian R. Rifkin
Kei Yasuda, Christophe Richez, Melissa B. Uccellini, Rocco J. Richards, Ramon Bonegio, Akira Shizuo, Marc Monestier, Ronald B. Corley, Gregory A. Viglianti, Ann Marshak‐Rothstein, Ian R. Rifkin
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