Autoimmune Hair Loss Induced by Alloantigen in C57BL/6 Mice.

    January 2003 in “ Cell Structure and Function
    Zhi-ping Zong, Shinobu Matsui, Aili Li, Shogo Katsuda, Nobuo Yamaguchi
    TLDR Injecting certain cells into mice caused hair loss, which was preventable with a specific inhibitor.
    The study demonstrated that injecting Meth-A cells expressing H-2K(d).D (d) antigen into C57BL/6 mice, which express H-2K(b).D (b) antigen, induced alopecia, characterized by dense mononuclear cell infiltration and foreign-body giant-cell reactions in hair follicles. This effect was inhibited by K252a, a protein kinase inhibitor. Lymphocytes from Meth-A cell-injected mice showed significant differences compared to normal mice, and when these lymphocytes were cultured and transferred to normal mice, they also induced alopecia. The findings suggested that the alloantigen disturbed immunological homeostasis, with lymphokine-activated killer cells playing a crucial role in the autoimmune response against hair follicles.
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