Transgenic mice were generated to establish an animal model for T-cell-mediated autoimmune skin disease. A membrane-bound form of OVA (mOVA) was specifically expressed under the control of the keratin 5 (K5) promoter in the epidermal and hair follicular keratinocytes of mice. Syngeneic, wild-type mice rejected the skin grafts of K5-mOVA mice with the generation of OVA-specific CTL. To study the CTL response against K5-mOVA skin, we used OT-I transgenic mice, which produce K(b)-restricted, OVA-specific CD8+ T cells. Accelerated rejection of K5-mOVA skin was demonstrated when transplanted onto OT-I mice. Furthermore, OT-I cells, when adoptively transferred into K5-mOVA mice, underwent activation and vigorous proliferation in the skin-draining lymph nodes. A bone-marrow-reconstitution assay demonstrated that K(b) presentation by bone-marrow-derived cells, but not epithelial cells, was required for this response, indicating that cross-priming was the basis for immunity in this model. Finally, transferred OT-I cells, activated by cross-priming, targeted the skin of K5-mOVA mice, resulting in development of skin lesions that were reminiscent of toxic epidermal necrolysis. We conclude that our system provides a useful model for autoimmune skin diseases and will aid understanding of the pathomechanism of drug eruption, viral exanthema, and graft-versus-host disease.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/eji.200323630DOI Listing

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