APC-targeted proinsulin expression inactivates insulin-specific memory CD8+ T cells in NOD mice.
Peta Ls ReevesRajeev RudrarajuXiao LiuF Susan WongEmma E Hamilton-WilliamsRaymond J SteptoePublished in: Immunology and cell biology (2017)
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) results from T-cell-mediated autoimmune destruction of pancreatic β cells. Effector T-cell responses emerge early in disease development and expand as disease progresses. Following β-cell destruction, a long-lived T-cell memory is generated that represents a barrier to islet transplantation and other cellular insulin-replacement therapies. Development of effective immunotherapies that control or ablate β-cell destructive effector and memory T-cell responses has the potential to prevent disease progression and recurrence. Targeting antigen expression to antigen-presenting cells inactivates cognate CD8+ effector and memory T-cell responses and has therapeutic potential. Here we investigated this in the context of insulin-specific responses in the non-obese diabetic mouse where genetic immune tolerance defects could impact on therapeutic tolerance induction. Insulin-specific CD8+ memory T cells transferred to mice expressing proinsulin in antigen-presenting cells proliferated in response to transgenically expressed proinsulin and the majority were rapidly deleted. A small proportion of transferred insulin-specific Tmem remained undeleted and these were antigen-unresponsive, exhibited reduced T cell receptor (TCR) expression and H-2Kd/insB15-23 tetramer binding and expressed co-inhibitory molecules. Expression of proinsulin in antigen-presenting cells also abolished the diabetogenic capacity of CD8+ effector T cells. Therefore, destructive insulin-specific CD8+ T cells are effectively inactivated by enforced proinsulin expression despite tolerance defects that exist in diabetes-prone NOD mice. These findings have important implications in developing immunotherapeutic approaches to T1D and other T-cell-mediated autoimmune diseases.
Keyphrases
- type diabetes
- induced apoptosis
- glycemic control
- poor prognosis
- cell cycle arrest
- regulatory t cells
- working memory
- cardiovascular disease
- binding protein
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- insulin resistance
- multiple sclerosis
- dendritic cells
- cell therapy
- metabolic syndrome
- high fat diet induced
- oxidative stress
- long non coding rna
- cancer therapy
- risk assessment
- stem cells
- weight loss
- type iii
- skeletal muscle
- genome wide
- wild type
- gene expression
- case report
- mesenchymal stem cells
- drug induced
- bariatric surgery
- single molecule
- transcription factor