ovalbumin has been researched along with Stevens-Johnson-Syndrome* in 1 studies
1 other study(ies) available for ovalbumin and Stevens-Johnson-Syndrome
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Prevention of toxic epidermal necrolysis by regulatory T cells.
To analyze immunoregulation of autoreactive T cells specific for epidermal skin antigens, we crossed transgenic mice expressing ovalbumin selectively in keratinocytes under the keratin 5 promoter (K5-mOVA) with mice expressing a K(b)-restricted OVA-specific T cell receptor transgene (OT-I). In athymic double-transgenic mice, OT-I cells developed extrathymically and, at 8-12 weeks of age, initiated severe epidermal damage mimicking toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN). In contrast, euthymic double-transgenic mice showed thymic deletion of OT-I cells, had few of these cells in the periphery, and never developed skin changes mimicking TEN. Adoptive transfer of OT-I cells isolated from euthymic double-transgenic mice induced TEN in athymic K5-mOVA single-transgenic mice. This spontaneous disease in athymic double-transgenic mice was prevented by transferring lymph node cells from euthymic mice, but was not prevented when CD4(+) or CD25(+) cells were depleted from this population. Although purified CD4(+)CD25(+) cells scarcely prevented the skin disease induced by adoptive transfer of OT-I cells, they efficiently prevented the disease when co-transferred with CD11c(+) dendritic cells. These results suggested that thymus-derived regulatory T cells cooperate with CD11c(+) dendritic cells to prevent life-threatening skin damage such as TEN. Topics: Adoptive Transfer; Animals; CD11c Antigen; Immunophenotyping; Keratin-15; Keratin-5; Keratins; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Mice, Nude; Mice, Transgenic; Ovalbumin; Receptors, Interleukin-2; Stevens-Johnson Syndrome; T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory | 2005 |