Antigen presenting cell-targeted proinsulin expression converts insulin-specific CD8+ T-cell priming to tolerance in autoimmune-prone NOD mice.
Peta L S ReevesRajeev RudrarajuF Susan WongEmma E Hamilton-WilliamsRaymond J SteptoePublished in: European journal of immunology (2017)
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) results from autoimmune destruction of insulin-producing pancreatic β cells. Therapies need to incorporate strategies to overcome the genetic defects that impair induction or maintenance of peripheral T-cell tolerance and contribute to disease development. We tested whether the enforced expression of an islet autoantigen in antigen-presenting cells (APC) counteracted peripheral T-cell tolerance defects in autoimmune-prone NOD mice. We observed that insulin-specific CD8+ T cells transferred to mice in which proinsulin was transgenically expressed in APCs underwent several rounds of division and the majority were deleted. Residual insulin-specific CD8+ T cells were rendered unresponsive and this was associated with TCR downregulation, loss of tetramer binding and expression of a range of co-inhibitory molecules. Notably, accumulation and effector differentiation of insulin-specific CD8+ T cells in pancreatic lymph nodes was prominent in non-transgenic recipients but blocked by transgenic proinsulin expression. This shift from T-cell priming to T-cell tolerance exemplifies the tolerogenic capacity of autoantigen expression by APC and the capacity to overcome genetic tolerance defects.
Keyphrases
- type diabetes
- poor prognosis
- glycemic control
- induced apoptosis
- lymph node
- binding protein
- multiple sclerosis
- cardiovascular disease
- high fat diet induced
- dendritic cells
- cell proliferation
- gene expression
- genome wide
- insulin resistance
- oxidative stress
- transcription factor
- mesenchymal stem cells
- single cell
- copy number
- immune response
- cell cycle arrest
- case report
- cell therapy
- dna binding