Modifying Enzymes Are Elicited by ER Stress, Generating Epitopes That Are Selectively Recognized by CD4+ T Cells in Patients With Type 1 Diabetes

内质网应激会引发修饰酶,产生可被 1 型糖尿病患者的 CD4+ T 细胞选择性识别的表位

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作者:Meghan L Marre, John W McGinty, I-Ting Chow, Megan E DeNicola, Noah W Beck, Sally C Kent, Alvin C Powers, Rita Bottino, David M Harlan, Carla J Greenbaum, William W Kwok, Jon D Piganelli, Eddie A James

Abstract

In spite of tolerance mechanisms, some individuals develop T-cell-mediated autoimmunity. Posttranslational modifications that increase the affinity of epitope presentation and/or recognition represent one means through which self-tolerance mechanisms can be circumvented. We investigated T-cell recognition of peptides that correspond to modified β-cell antigens in subjects with type 1 diabetes. Modified peptides elicited enhanced proliferation by autoreactive T-cell clones. Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress in insulinoma cells increased cytosolic calcium and the activity of tissue transglutaminase 2 (tTG2). Furthermore, stressed human islets and insulinomas elicited effector responses from T cells specific for modified peptides, suggesting that ER stress-derived tTG2 activity generated deamidated neoepitopes that autoreactive T cells recognized. Patients with type 1 diabetes had large numbers of T cells specific for these epitopes in their peripheral blood. T cells with these specificities were also isolated from the pancreatic draining lymph nodes of cadaveric donors with established diabetes. Together, these results suggest that self-antigens are enzymatically modified in β-cells during ER stress, giving rise to modified epitopes that could serve to initiate autoimmunity or to further broaden the antigenic repertoire, activating potentially pathogenic CD4+ T cells that may not be effectively eliminated by negative selection.

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