| Literature DB >> 22941509 |
Leslie P Cousens1, Nader Najafian, Federico Mingozzi, Wassim Elyaman, Bruce Mazer, Leonard Moise, Timothy J Messitt, Yan Su, Mohamed Sayegh, Katherine High, Samia J Khoury, David W Scott, Anne S De Groot.
Abstract
Tregitopes are regulatory T cell epitopes derived from immunoglobulin G (IgG) that stimulate CD25(+) FoxP3(+) T cells to expand. In conjunction with these Tregs, Tregitopes can prevent, treat, and even cure autoimmune disease in mouse models, suppress allo-specific responses in murine transplant models, inhibit CD8(+) T cell responses to recombinant adeno-associated virus (AAV) gene transfer vectors, and induce adaptive Tregs in DO11.10 mice. In this review of recent Tregitope studies, we summarize their effects in vitro and describe recent comparisons between intravenous IgG (IVIG) and Tregitopes in standard in vivo immune tolerance models. Further investigations of the mechanism of action of Tregitopes in the preclinical models described here will lead to clinical trials where Tregitopes may have the potential to alter the treatment of autoimmune disease, transplantation, and allergy, and to improve the efficiency of gene and protein replacement therapies.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22941509 PMCID: PMC3538121 DOI: 10.1007/s10875-012-9762-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Immunol ISSN: 0271-9142 Impact factor: 8.317
Fig. 1Tregitopes are highly conserved Treg epitopes found in IgG. They are postulated to reduce the immunogenicity of neo-epitopes in the hypervariable region of IgG CDR. De Groot AS, Moise L, McMurry JA, Wambre E, Van Overtvelt L, Moingeon P, et al. Activation of natural regulatory T cells by IgG Fc-derived peptide “Tregitopes.” Blood. 2008; 112(8):3303–11. American Society of Hematology, Copyright 2012. Reproduced with permission of American Society of Hematology (ASH)
Fig. 2Proposed Tregitope mechanism of action. The following step-by-step sequence of events may lead to nTreg activation, antigen-presenting cell (APC) modulation, and either suppression of T effectors or induction of iTregs in the presence of Tregitopes: (Step 1) Tregitopes are presented by activated APC to Tregs that have Tregitope-specific TCR. These nTregs then either indirectly through cytokine release (Step 2), or directly suppress the activation of (Step 3) antigen-presenting cells (macrophages, B cells, dendritic cells, or others), resulting in downregulation of the co-stimulatory signaling molecules CD80, CD86, and MHC class II. The cytokines released by the nTregs either directly affect (Steps 4 and 5) the functioning of CD4 effector T cells, CD8 T cells, and Th17 T cells; or indirectly regulate (Step 3) these cells through APC or direct cell-to-cell contact. Adapted from [2]
Five tregitopes found in IgG
| Tregitope | Amino acids | Validation studies | # MHC motifs | Class II EpiMatrix promiscuity score (>10 = significant) | Location HC, LC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HTREG_IGGC-167 | 26 | Published (De Groot et al. Blood 2008) | 20 | 30.05 | CH1 |
| HTREG_IGGC-289 | 21 | Published (De Groot et al. Blood 2008) | 14 | 22.57 | CH2 |
| HTREG_IGGH-009 | 15 | HLA-binding, Treg induction | 7 | 14.07 | VH |
| HTREG_IGGH-029 | 15 | HLA-binding, Treg induction | 7 | 14.09 | VH |
| HTREG_IGGK-084 | 15 | HLA-binding, Treg induction | 7 | 16.38 | VK |
The five best-defined human IgG-derived Tregitopes listed above are 15 to 26 amino acids in length and have multiple HLA binding motifs and high EpiMatrix scores. These Tregitopes are located in the IgG constant domain (CH) and variable domains (VH, VK). Several mouse IgG homologs for these Tregitopes have been identified, although hTregitopes 167 and 289 bind to mouse MHC and, in a murine model of EAE, suppressed symptoms of EAE as well as IVIG [1, 31]