Mice transgenic for IL-1 receptor antagonist protein are resistant to herpetic stromal keratitis: possible role for IL-1 in herpetic stromal keratitis pathogenesis
- PMID: 15004178
- DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.172.6.3736
Mice transgenic for IL-1 receptor antagonist protein are resistant to herpetic stromal keratitis: possible role for IL-1 in herpetic stromal keratitis pathogenesis
Abstract
Ocular infection with HSV may result in the blinding immunoinflammatory lesion stromal keratitis (SK). This represents a CD4+ T cell-mediated immunopathologic lesion in both humans and a mouse model. Early events in the pathogenesis that set the stage for SK are poorly understood. The present study evaluates the role of IL-1 using a transgenic mouse that overexpresses the IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra) protein. Such transgenic mice were markedly resistant to SK compared with IL-1ra(-/-) and C57BL/6 control animals. The resistance was shown to be the consequence of reduced expression of molecules such as IL-6, macrophage-inflammatory protein-2, and vascular endothelial growth factor, normally up-regulated directly or indirectly by IL-1. A critical event impaired in IL-1ra transgenic mice was vascular endothelial growth factor production with a consequent marked reduction in angiogenesis, an essential step in SK pathogenesis. Targeting IL-1 could prove to be a worthwhile therapeutic approach to control SK, an important cause of human blindness.
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