Simultaneous Recognition of Allogeneic MHC and Cognate Autoantigen by Autoreactive T Cells in Transplant Rejection.
Adam L BurrackLaurie G LandryJanet SiebertMarilyne CoulombeRonald G GillMaki NakayamaPublished in: Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950) (2018)
The autoimmune condition is a primary obstacle to inducing tolerance in type 1 diabetes patients receiving allogeneic pancreas transplants. It is unknown how autoreactive T cells that recognize self-MHC molecules contribute to MHC-disparate allograft rejection. In this report, we show the presence and accumulation of dual-reactive, that is autoreactive and alloreactive, T cells in C3H islet allografts that were transplanted into autoimmune diabetic NOD mice. Using high-throughput sequencing, we discovered that T cells prevalent in allografts share identical TCRs with autoreactive T cells present in pancreatic islets. T cells expressing TCRs that are enriched in allograft lesions recognized C3H MHC molecules, and five of six cell lines expressing these TCRs were also reactive to NOD islet cells. These results reveal the presence of autoreactive T cells that mediate cross-reactive alloreactivity, and indicate a requirement for regulating such dual-reactive T cells in tissue replacement therapies given to autoimmune individuals.
Keyphrases
- type diabetes
- stem cell transplantation
- multiple sclerosis
- bone marrow
- high throughput sequencing
- induced apoptosis
- cardiovascular disease
- drug induced
- kidney transplantation
- cell cycle arrest
- single cell
- insulin resistance
- genome wide
- metabolic syndrome
- low dose
- adipose tissue
- heat shock
- wild type
- cell death
- wound healing
- heat shock protein