Artigo Acesso aberto Produção Nacional Revisado por pares

Immunomodulation and Protection Induced by DNA-hsp65 Vaccination in an Animal Model of Arthritis

2005; Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.; Volume: 16; Issue: 11 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1089/hum.2005.16.1338

ISSN

1557-7422

Autores

R.R. Santos-Junior, Alexandrina Sartori, Marcelo De Franco, Orlando Garcia Ribeiro Filho, Arlete Aparecida Martins Coelho‐Castelo, Vânia Luiza Deperon Bonato, Wafa Hanna Koury Cabrera, Olga M. Ibañez, Célio Lopes Silva,

Tópico(s)

Immune Response and Inflammation

Resumo

We described a prophylactic and therapeutic effect of a DNA vaccine encoding the Mycobacterium leprae 65-kDa heat shock protein (DNA-hsp65) in experimental murine tuberculosis. However, high homology of the vaccine to the corresponding mammalian hsp60, together with the CpG motifs in the plasmidial vector, could trigger or exacerbate an autoimmune disease. In the present study, we evaluate the potential of DNA-hsp65 vaccination to induce or modulate arthritis in mice genetically selected for acute inflammatory reaction (AIR), either maximal (AIRmax) or minimal (AIRmin). Mice immunized with DNA-hsp65 or injected with the corresponding DNA vector (DNAv) developed no arthritis, whereas pristane injection resulted in arthritis in 62% of AIRmax mice and 7.3% of AIRmin mice. Administered after pristane, DNA-hsp65 downregulated arthritis induction in AIRmax animals. Levels of interleukin (IL)-12 were significantly lower in mice receiving pristane plus DNA-hsp65 or DNAv than in mice receiving pristane alone. However, when mice previously injected with pristane were inoculated with DNA-hsp65 or DNAv, the protective effect was significantly correlated with lower IL-6 and IL-12 levels and higher IL-10 levels. Our results strongly suggest that DNA-hsp65 has no arthritogenic potential and is actually protective against experimentally induced arthritis in mice.

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