| Literature DB >> 18755894 |
Liqin Ban1, Jack Zhang, Limei Wang, Willem Kuhtreiber, Douglas Burger, Denise L Faustman.
Abstract
Human autoimmune (AI) diseases are difficult to treat, because immunosuppressive drugs are nonspecific, produce high levels of adverse effects, and are not based on mechanistic understanding of disease. Destroying the rare autoreactive T lymphocytes causing AI diseases would improve treatment. In animal models, TNF selectively kills autoreactive T cells, thereby hampering disease onset or progression. Here, we seek to determine, in fresh human blood, whether TNF or agonists of TNF selectively kill autoreactive T cells, while sparing normal T cells. We isolated highly pure CD4 or CD8 T cells from patients with type 1 diabetes (n = 675), other AI diseases, and healthy controls (n = 512). Using two cell death assays, we found that a subpopulation of CD8, but not CD4, T cells in patients' blood was vulnerable to TNF or TNF agonist-induced death. One agonist for the TNFR2 receptor exhibited a dose-response pattern of killing. In type 1 diabetes, the subpopulation of T cells susceptible to TNF or TNFR2 agonist-induced death was traced specifically to autoreactive T cells to insulin, a known autoantigen. Other activated and memory T cell populations were resistant to TNF-triggered death. This study shows that autoreactive T cells, although rare, can be selectively destroyed in isolated human blood. TNF and a TNFR2 agonist may offer highly targeted therapies, with the latter likely to be less systemically toxic.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18755894 PMCID: PMC2533243 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0803429105
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205