The role of oil and agalactosyl IgG in the induction of arthritis in rodent models

Abstract
The proportion of agalactosyl IgG [Gal(O)] is raised in human rheumatoid arthritis and tuberculosis. We report here that injection of pristane into the peritoneal cavities of mice on days 0 and 50, which is known to induce plasmacytomas and arthritis, also induced a rise in the proportion of Gal(O), correlating with a simultaneous rise in the level of IgG antibody binding to the 65-kDa heat-shock protein of Mycobacterium bovis (hsp65). Arthritis developed in a proportion of those CBA/Igb mice with the highest percentage of Gal(O). Pretreatment with 50 μg of recombinant mycobacterial hsp65 intraperitoneal (i.p.) on day —10, or with 500 rad irradiation on day - 2 before the first of the two injections of pristane reduced the incidence of arthritis from 24% in control animals, to 5.3% and 0.4%, respectively. The reduced incidence of disease correlated with smaller rises in the % Gal(O) at 50–75 days, although levels at 150–200 days were not affected. The arthritogenic effect of oil was not confined to the pristane model, since a single i.p. injection of oil 21 days before immunizing DBA/1 mice with type II collagen reduced the mean day of onset of this arthritis, [which we have previously shown to correlate with raised % Gal(O)], from 38 to 15 days (p < 0.001). One interpretation is that an autoimmunogenic stimulus, given when % Gal (O) is raised, is more likely to evoke disease. Since oil granulomata are known to secrete interleukin 6, which has B cell-regulatory properties and is secreted by rheumatoid synovial cells, we tested sera from interleukin 6-transgenic mice, and found a strikingly raised percentage of Gal(O). We suggest, therefore, that the role of oil in the induction of arthritis is the dysregulation of cytokine release of which a raised percentage of Gal(O) may be a direct or indirect consequence, associated with an increased susceptibility to autoimmunogenic stimuli.