Literature DB >> 25855358

T Cell Cross-Reactivity between a Highly Immunogenic EBV Epitope and a Self-Peptide Naturally Presented by HLA-B*18:01+ Cells.

Melissa J Rist1, Kelly M Hibbert2, Nathan P Croft3, Corey Smith4, Michelle A Neller4, Jacqueline M Burrows4, John J Miles5, Anthony W Purcell3, Jamie Rossjohn6, Stephanie Gras7, Scott R Burrows8.   

Abstract

T cell cross-reactivity underpins the molecular mimicry hypothesis in which microbial peptides sharing structural features with host peptides stimulate T cells that cross-react with self-peptides, thereby initiating and/or perpetuating autoimmune disease. EBV represents a potentially important factor in the pathogenesis of several T cell-mediated autoimmune disorders, with molecular mimicry a likely mechanism. In this study, we describe a human self-peptide (DELEIKAY) that is a homolog of a highly immunogenic EBV T cell epitope (SELEIKRY) presented by HLA-B*18:01. This self-peptide was shown to bind stably to HLA-B*18:01, and peptide elution/mass spectrometric studies showed it is naturally presented by this HLA molecule on the surface of human cells. A significant proportion of CD8(+) T cells raised from some healthy individuals against this EBV epitope cross-reacted with the self-peptide. A diverse array of TCRs was expressed by the cross-reactive T cells, with variable functional avidity for the self-peptide, including some T cells that appeared to avoid autoreactivity by a narrow margin, with only 10-fold more of the self-peptide required for equivalent activation as compared with the EBV peptide. Structural studies revealed that the self-peptide-HLA-B*18:01 complex is a structural mimic of the EBV peptide-HLA-B*18:01 complex, and that the strong antiviral T cell response is primarily dependent on the alanine/arginine mismatch at position 7. To our knowledge, this is the first report confirming the natural presentation of a self-peptide cross-recognized in the context of self-HLA by EBV-reactive CD8(+) T cells. These results illustrate how aberrant immune responses and immunopathological diseases could be generated by EBV infection.
Copyright © 2015 by The American Association of Immunologists, Inc.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25855358     DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1500233

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Immunol        ISSN: 0022-1767            Impact factor:   5.422


  8 in total

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3.  In-silico discovery of cancer-specific peptide-HLA complexes for targeted therapy.

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5.  Broad CD8+ T cell cross-recognition of distinct influenza A strains in humans.

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6.  Genetic Bias, Diversity Indices, Physiochemical Properties and CDR3 Motifs Divide Auto-Reactive from Allo-Reactive T-Cell Repertoires.

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Review 7.  T-cell-receptor cross-recognition and strategies to select safe T-cell receptors for clinical translation.

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Review 8.  Needle in a Haystack: The Naïve Repertoire as a Source of T Cell Receptors for Adoptive Therapy with Engineered T Cells.

Authors:  Elvira D'Ippolito; Karolin I Wagner; Dirk H Busch
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2020-11-06       Impact factor: 5.923

  8 in total

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