| Literature DB >> 20805382 |
Mark Peakman1, Matthias von Herrath.
Abstract
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20805382 PMCID: PMC2927927 DOI: 10.2337/db10-0630
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes ISSN: 0012-1797 Impact factor: 9.461
Mechanisms of action of antigen-specific immunotherapy and predicted nature of response
| Mechanism | Predicted outcomes | Tolerance induction | Durability |
|---|---|---|---|
| Immune regulation induced against β-cell antigen (typically associated with aTregs, IL-10, TGF-β induction) | Responses should be detectable (e.g., by cytokine production or functional read-out) | Operational tolerance should be achieved | Responses durable in the range of months up to 1 year |
| Should offer benefit of linked suppression of response to other β-cell antigens | |||
| Immune deviation associated with change of dominant cellular phenotype (e.g., from TH1 to TH2) | Responses should be detectable (e.g., by cytokine production or functional read-out) | Operational tolerance should be achieved | Responses durable in the range of months |
| May offer benefit of linked suppression | |||
| Immune deletion of β-cell antigen-specific T-cells | Difficult to detect deletion | Operational tolerance not guaranteed | Transient (weeks/months) |
| No benefit of linked suppression |
FIG. 1.Beneficial effects of antigen-specific immunotherapy (ASI) on the pathological immune responses that result in type 1 diabetes. β-cell damage is a result of the combined actions of proinflammatory helper T cells (TH1) and cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL), which are primed against islet autoantigens such as GAD65 (GAD) and preproinsulin (INS) by inflammatory dendritic cells (DCs). ASI has two predominant beneficial effects, namely deletion of T-cells and induction of regulation, either via priming of regulatory T-cells (Tregs) or immune deviation. The major benefit of Treg induction is linked suppression, the process by which Tregs induced to regulate in response to one autoantigen (e.g., GAD) can also regulate responses to other autoantigens (e.g., INS) presented by the same DC.
FIG. 2.Schematic representation of the balance of clinical trial activity in type 1 diabetes. Data are modeled onto a graphical representation of diabetes progression (adapted from reference [38]; reprinted with permission from Atkinson). Data are separated in two dimensions. First, according to stage of disease (primary prevention in the genetically at-risk before autoimmunity is apparent; secondary prevention when autoimmunity is present but no disease; and tertiary prevention or intervention when diabetes has been diagnosed but there is the opportunity to preserve C-peptide secretion); second, according to whether the therapy is antigen-specific (in black) or nonantigen-specific (in red). Underlined therapies are currently actively recruiting. The pie charts indicate the relative proportions of antigen-specific (black) and nonantigen-specific immunotherapy (red) in use at the different disease stages. DIPP, Diabetes Prediction and Prevention (39); APL, altered peptide ligand (40); ATG, anti-thymocyte globulin; CTLA-4Ig, cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen-4 immunoglobulin; GCSF, granulocyte colony stimulating factor; HSCT, hematopoietic stem cell transplant; IFA, incomplete Freund's adjuvant; IL-1β, interleukin-1β; MMF/DZB, mycophenolate mofetil and daclizumab (41); α1-AT, α-1 antitrypsin; PBMC, peripheral blood mononuclear cell; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor-α.
Explanations for the paucity of antigen-specific immunotherapy studies in the intervention setting
| “Biologics” and other nonantigen-specific approaches | Antigen-specific immunotherapy | |
|---|---|---|
| Biomarkers | Facile (e.g., reduction in B-cells during anti-CD20 therapy) | Emerging but remain typically site and study-specific; lack of consensus |
| Dosing and route of administration | Clear treatment pathways from Phase I studies and/or other diseases | Often difficult and complex in ASI; issues over use of adjuvants unresolved; optimal routes remain to be determined |
| Preclinical models | Generally robust and informative | Translation not always straightforward (e.g., is the intranasal route appropriate in humans; antigen or peptide choice; timing of therapy in relation to natural history) |
| Success in other autoimmune diseases | Yes | Not yet (but whole allergen and allergen peptide immunotherapy are effective) |
| Target population | All patients with type 1 diabetes | Inclusion criteria may require staging to presence of selected autoantibodies and their titre, and to HLA type for peptides |
| Efficacy | Often effective as interventions | Intervention is a tough arena for trials with metabolic outcomes (i.e., C-peptide preservation) |
| Safety | Variable but generally predictable | Good |
| Biotechnology/Pharmaceutical involvement | High | Variable; e.g., there is still no Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) grade proinsulin; new Intellectual Property (IP) relies upon novel modes of delivery |
FIG. 3.Approaches currently under evaluation for delivery of antigen-specific immunotherapy. DCs, dendritic cells.