Constructing the optimal experimental autoimmune thyroiditis mouse model using porcine thyroglobulin

IntroductionAutoimmune thyroiditis (AIT) is a chronic autoimmune disease characterized by lymphocytic infiltration of the thyroid gland and elevated specific antibodies. Its incidence rises annually, yet no standardized animal model fully mimics human AIT. Given unclear pathogenesis and lack of targ...

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Main Authors: Ke Liu, Pei Zhang, Zi-Shan Jin, Xiang-Kun Meng, Jin-Li Luo, Lin Han, Xiao-Tong Yu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Immunology
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2025.1591196/full
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author Ke Liu
Pei Zhang
Zi-Shan Jin
Xiang-Kun Meng
Jin-Li Luo
Jin-Li Luo
Jin-Li Luo
Lin Han
Xiao-Tong Yu
author_facet Ke Liu
Pei Zhang
Zi-Shan Jin
Xiang-Kun Meng
Jin-Li Luo
Jin-Li Luo
Jin-Li Luo
Lin Han
Xiao-Tong Yu
author_sort Ke Liu
collection DOAJ
description IntroductionAutoimmune thyroiditis (AIT) is a chronic autoimmune disease characterized by lymphocytic infiltration of the thyroid gland and elevated specific antibodies. Its incidence rises annually, yet no standardized animal model fully mimics human AIT. Given unclear pathogenesis and lack of targeted immunotherapies, researchers invest significant time in developing suitable models. This study systematically compares pathological and immunological effects of different immunization conditions (antigen dose, frequency, administration methods) in NOD/LtJ mice to establish an optimal model for elucidating AIT pathogenesis and therapies.MethodsEighty female NOD/LtJ mice were divided into subcutaneous (SC) and tail vein intravenous (IV) injection groups. SC groups received porcine thyroglobulin (pTg) emulsified in CFA (primary) and IFA (booster), with doses of 50/100/200 μg and frequencies of 2 or 3 immunizations. IV groups received pTg in PBS followed by LPS (3 immunizations: weeks 1, 3, 4). All model groups drank 0.05% NaI water. Thyroid histopathology (HE staining, infiltration scoring), serum TPO-Ab/TG-Ab (ELISA), cytokines (multiplex assay), Th17/Treg cells (multiplex immunofluorescence), and thyroid IL-17A/NLRP3/Caspase-1 (immunohistochemistry) were analyzed 2 weeks post-last immunization.ResultsHigh-dose antigen (200 μg pTg) with high-frequency immunization (three times) via SC or IV routes induced severe thyroid lymphocyte infiltration (scores: SC 3.4±0.55, IV 3.2±0.45; p<0.01 vs. controls), follicular destruction, and elevated serum antibodies (TPO-Ab: IV 438.8±13.15 > SC 406.2±7.46; TG-Ab: IV 158.4±5.32 > SC 141.9±2.36). This protocol activated Th1/Th17 cytokines (IL-17A, IL-6, TNF-α), increased Treg cells (p<0.001), and specifically enhanced NLRP3 (p<0.001) and Caspase-1 in thyroid tissue, with IV injection showing superior antibody production and inflammasome activation.DiscussionThe combination of high-dose pTg (200 μg) and three immunizations maximally induced AIT pathology and immune responses in NOD/LtJ mice. Tail vein injection excelled in stimulating antibody production and NLRP3 activation, while subcutaneous injection promoted stronger histological inflammation. After balancing operational feasibility, pathological reproducibility, and immunological specificity, three subcutaneous and intravenous tail injection of 200 μg pTg are recommended as the optimal modeling protocol. This approach accelerates model selection, improves experimental efficiency, and reduces animal use, providing a robust foundation for AIT research.
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spelling doaj-art-6f2cd3da936a45a79fc6e339d59fbad92025-08-20T05:32:49ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Immunology1664-32242025-08-011610.3389/fimmu.2025.15911961591196Constructing the optimal experimental autoimmune thyroiditis mouse model using porcine thyroglobulinKe Liu0Pei Zhang1Zi-Shan Jin2Xiang-Kun Meng3Jin-Li Luo4Jin-Li Luo5Jin-Li Luo6Lin Han7Xiao-Tong Yu8Guang’anmen Hospital, China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences, Beijing, ChinaSouth District of Guang’anmen Hospital, China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences, Beijing, ChinaBeijing University of Chinese Medicine, Beijing, ChinaChangchun University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Changchun, Jilin, ChinaBeijing University of Chinese Medicine, Beijing, ChinaChina Traditional Chinese Medicine Holdings Co Limited, Foshan, Guangdong, ChinaGuangdong e-fong Pharmaceutical CO., LTD., Foshan, Guangdong, ChinaGuang’anmen Hospital, China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences, Beijing, ChinaGuang’anmen Hospital, China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences, Beijing, ChinaIntroductionAutoimmune thyroiditis (AIT) is a chronic autoimmune disease characterized by lymphocytic infiltration of the thyroid gland and elevated specific antibodies. Its incidence rises annually, yet no standardized animal model fully mimics human AIT. Given unclear pathogenesis and lack of targeted immunotherapies, researchers invest significant time in developing suitable models. This study systematically compares pathological and immunological effects of different immunization conditions (antigen dose, frequency, administration methods) in NOD/LtJ mice to establish an optimal model for elucidating AIT pathogenesis and therapies.MethodsEighty female NOD/LtJ mice were divided into subcutaneous (SC) and tail vein intravenous (IV) injection groups. SC groups received porcine thyroglobulin (pTg) emulsified in CFA (primary) and IFA (booster), with doses of 50/100/200 μg and frequencies of 2 or 3 immunizations. IV groups received pTg in PBS followed by LPS (3 immunizations: weeks 1, 3, 4). All model groups drank 0.05% NaI water. Thyroid histopathology (HE staining, infiltration scoring), serum TPO-Ab/TG-Ab (ELISA), cytokines (multiplex assay), Th17/Treg cells (multiplex immunofluorescence), and thyroid IL-17A/NLRP3/Caspase-1 (immunohistochemistry) were analyzed 2 weeks post-last immunization.ResultsHigh-dose antigen (200 μg pTg) with high-frequency immunization (three times) via SC or IV routes induced severe thyroid lymphocyte infiltration (scores: SC 3.4±0.55, IV 3.2±0.45; p<0.01 vs. controls), follicular destruction, and elevated serum antibodies (TPO-Ab: IV 438.8±13.15 > SC 406.2±7.46; TG-Ab: IV 158.4±5.32 > SC 141.9±2.36). This protocol activated Th1/Th17 cytokines (IL-17A, IL-6, TNF-α), increased Treg cells (p<0.001), and specifically enhanced NLRP3 (p<0.001) and Caspase-1 in thyroid tissue, with IV injection showing superior antibody production and inflammasome activation.DiscussionThe combination of high-dose pTg (200 μg) and three immunizations maximally induced AIT pathology and immune responses in NOD/LtJ mice. Tail vein injection excelled in stimulating antibody production and NLRP3 activation, while subcutaneous injection promoted stronger histological inflammation. After balancing operational feasibility, pathological reproducibility, and immunological specificity, three subcutaneous and intravenous tail injection of 200 μg pTg are recommended as the optimal modeling protocol. This approach accelerates model selection, improves experimental efficiency, and reduces animal use, providing a robust foundation for AIT research.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2025.1591196/fullautoimmune thyroiditisexperimental autoimmune thyroiditisNOD/LtJ miceanimal model constructionmolecular mechanism
spellingShingle Ke Liu
Pei Zhang
Zi-Shan Jin
Xiang-Kun Meng
Jin-Li Luo
Jin-Li Luo
Jin-Li Luo
Lin Han
Xiao-Tong Yu
Constructing the optimal experimental autoimmune thyroiditis mouse model using porcine thyroglobulin
Frontiers in Immunology
autoimmune thyroiditis
experimental autoimmune thyroiditis
NOD/LtJ mice
animal model construction
molecular mechanism
title Constructing the optimal experimental autoimmune thyroiditis mouse model using porcine thyroglobulin
title_full Constructing the optimal experimental autoimmune thyroiditis mouse model using porcine thyroglobulin
title_fullStr Constructing the optimal experimental autoimmune thyroiditis mouse model using porcine thyroglobulin
title_full_unstemmed Constructing the optimal experimental autoimmune thyroiditis mouse model using porcine thyroglobulin
title_short Constructing the optimal experimental autoimmune thyroiditis mouse model using porcine thyroglobulin
title_sort constructing the optimal experimental autoimmune thyroiditis mouse model using porcine thyroglobulin
topic autoimmune thyroiditis
experimental autoimmune thyroiditis
NOD/LtJ mice
animal model construction
molecular mechanism
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2025.1591196/full
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