Hyperresponsiveness to the IL-6 family of cytokines triggers a spontaneous rheumatoid arthritis (RA)-like disease in mice. On page 1459, Sawa and colleagues show that excessive IL-6 signaling drives hyperproliferation of CD4+ T cells, which then attack the joints.

IL-6 has been implicated in RA and other T cell–driven autoimmune diseases. Indeed, a previous study by this group showed that an activating mutation in the gp130 subunit of the IL-6 receptor caused a lymphocyte-driven arthritis in mice. But the mechanism was unclear. The authors now show that disease development in these mice depends on CD4+ T cells, but not on cytolytic CD8+ T cells or antibody-producing B cells.

The CD4+ cells did not appear to cause disease because of an affinity for joint-specific antigens. Rather, the cells simply proliferated excessively in the mutant mice. This hyperproliferation was not the fault of...

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