Back to Search Start Over

A low antigen dose selectively promotes expansion of high-avidity autoreactive T cells with distinct phenotypic characteristics: A study of human autoreactive CD4+T cells specific for GAD65.

Authors :
Öling, Viveka
Geubtner, Kelly
Ilonen, Jorma
Reijonen, Helena
Source :
Autoimmunity; Dec2010, Vol. 43 Issue 8, p573-582, 10p, 1 Chart, 3 Graphs
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

T cells specific for pancreatic islet proteins can be detected in type 1 diabetes patients and at-risk individuals, suggesting a failure of the central tolerance and negative selection. We addressed the question, how antigen dose shapes the diversity of CD4+ autoreactive T cells specific for glutamate decarboxylase 65 (GAD65) in a healthy HLA-DR*0404+ individual, with a persistent GAD65-specific T-cell response. CD4+T cells from this subject were stimulated with decreasing concentrations of the GAD65 555-567 (557I) peptide, and T-cell clones were derived from the tetramer-binding cell population. Functional and structural avidity, TcR-Vβ usage, and cytokine profiles were investigated at a clonal level. T-cell clones established with a low antigen dose (0.1 and 1 μg/ml) displayed higher avidity in contrast to the clones established with the highest antigen dose (10 μg/ml; Mann-Whitney U test, p = 0.003 and 0.006, respectively). The T-cell clones stimulated with the lowest peptide dose also had a higher tetramer-binding affinity than clones stimulated with the highest dose ( p = 0.026). The majority (60.0%) of the high-avidity clones expressed TcR-Vβ5.1 chain whereas only one (12.5%) low-avidity clone did. All clones displayed Th0/Th2 cytokine profiles, but intermediate and high-avidity clones produced more IL-10 than low-avidity clones ( p = 0.032). The results demonstrate an important role of the antigen dose in the determination of characteristics of the responding T-cell repertoire. High IL-13 and IL-10 production by GAD65-reactive T cells suggests a more anti-inflammatory profile of this healthy individual underlying protection from T1D. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08916934
Volume :
43
Issue :
8
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Autoimmunity
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
55090374
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3109/08916930903540424