Protein Information

ID 253
Name CD4
Synonyms CD4; CD4 antigen (p55); CD4 molecule; CD4mut; T cell antigen T4/LEU3; T cell surface glycoprotein CD4; T cell surface antigen T4/Leu 3; T cell surface glycoprotein CD4 precursor…

Compound Information

ID 616
Name mercuric chloride
CAS

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
8388693 Mathieson PW, Qasim FJ, Esnault VL, Oliveira DB: Animal models of systemic vasculitis. . J Autoimmun. 1993 Apr;6(2):251-64.
Necrotizing leucocytoclastic vasculitis is the histopathological hallmark of the small vessel systemic vasculitides (SV), a group of human diseases commonly associated with anti-neutrophil cytoplasm autoantibodies (ANCA). Necrotizing vasculitis is seen in a number of experimental systems, but none of these provide an ideal animal model for human SV. Vasculitis occurs in serum sickness reactions; in murine models of systemic lupus erythematosus; in association with infection, particularly chronic viral infections; and after treatment with certain drugs or inflammatory mediators. 'Spontaneous' vasculitis has been reported in specific mouse strains, especially with ageing, and in some larger species. The size of vessel involved and the type of inflammatory cells predominating are variable in these experimental situations, and none of these models feature antibodies analogous to ANCA. We have recently reported that Brown Norway rats treated with mercuric chloride (HgCl2) develop necrotizing leucocytoclastic vasculitis, especially in the gut, and also develop antibodies to myeloperoxidase (MPO) which recognize similar determinants on MPO to those bound by a subset of ANCA. Transfer of serum from HgCl2-treated rats to naive animals does not induce tissue injury. Preliminary experiments using pooled immunoglobulin or an anti-CD4 monoclonal antibody did not show useful therapeutic benefit from these treatments. HgCl2-induced vasculitis has weaknesses as an animal model of human SV, but is the only experimental model in which anti-MPO autoantibodies have so far been demonstrated, and therefore may be of particular relevance to ANCA-associated SV.
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