| Literature DB >> 33193382 |
Gerhild Wildner1, Maria Diedrichs-Möhring1.
Abstract
Molecular or antigenic mimicry is a term for the similarity of different antigens, which can be confused by the immune system. Antigen recognition by antibodies and T cell receptors is specific, but not restricted to a single antigen. Both types of receptors specifically recognize antigens and are expressed with a very high but still restricted variability compared to the number of different antigens they potentially could bind. T cell receptors only can bind to antigen peptides presented on certain self-MHC-molecules by screening only some amino acid side chains on both the presented peptides and the MHC molecule. The other amino acids of the peptide are not directly perceived by the T cell, offering the opportunity for a single T cell to recognize a variety of different antigens with the same receptor, which significantly increases the immune repertoire. The immune system is usually tolerant to autoantigens, especially to those of immune privileged sites, like the eye. Therefore, autoimmune diseases targeting these organs were hard to explain, unless a T cell is activated by an environmental peptide (e.g. pathogen) that is similar, but not necessarily identical with an autoantigen. Here we describe antigenic mimicry of retinal autoantigens with a variety of non-ocular antigens resulting in the induction of intraocular inflammation. T cells that are activated by mimotopes outside of the eye can pass the blood-retina barrier and enter ocular tissues. When reactivated in the eye by crossreaction with autoantigens they induce uveitis by recruiting inflammatory cells.Entities:
Keywords: HLA; T cells; autoimmune disease; intraocular inflammation; microbiome; nutritional antigens; pathogens; tolerance
Year: 2020 PMID: 33193382 PMCID: PMC7658003 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.580636
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Hypothesis of the induction of a T cell mimicry response leading to ocular autoimmunity. (A) Outside of the eye in the body (gut)?: A naive T cell has first contact with a non-eye-related antigen. In case of a concomitant danger signal (injury of the tissue, infection) innate antigen-presenting cells (APCs) are activated to induce effector T cell responses. (B) The antigen recognized by the T cell can either be from a pathogen [from infection or a food antigen, see (A)]. If the T cell recognizes harmless food antigen and erroneously receives concomitant activation signals from the APC alerted by danger signals the T cell gets activated and differentiates into a T helper (e.g. here: Th1) cell. (C) Activated T cells migrate in the blood circulation. In search of their antigen they can leave the blood vessels and enter even immune privileged organs like the eye. (D) The triangles represent retinal autoantigen peptides presented on MHC class II. The precise signals of attracting a T cell to a certain organ at a certain site (blood vessel) are still unknown. (E) When the T cell has screened the eye and found an antigen binding to its receptor, it gets reactivated and secretes cytokines and chemokines to recruit inflammatory cells. The intraocular antigen is different to the antigen of the original T cell priming outside of the eye. (F) Innate cells (monocytes/macrophages and/or granulocytes) recruited from the circulation are causing inflammation and tissue destruction resulting in uveitis. (G) Two different peptides presented and recognized by the same HLA molecule and T cell receptor (TCR), despite their restricted homologies. Only the core sequence of 8 amino acids presented in the groove is shown. Identical amino acid side chains are marked by white asterisks, the arrows point to similar side chains representing different amino acids also anchoring to the presenting HLA-molecule or being bound by the TCR.
Mimotopes of retinal autoantigen in uveitis.
| Source | Amino acid sequence of peptide/epitope | Protein | ||||||||||||||
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| Rotavirus | W | T | E | V | S | E | V | A | T | E | V | Outer capsid protein | ||||
| Bovine milk | S | E | E | S | A | E | V | A | T | E | E | V | Bovine αs2-casein aa 73-84 (peptide Cas) | |||
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| HLA-B | A | L | N | E | D | L | S | S | W | T | A | A |
| T | HLA-B, α1 domain | |
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| V | T | I | Y | L | G | N | Invasion protein aa 433-439 | ||||||||
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| V | G | T | P | A | E | V | A | MabA protein aa 231-238 | |||||||
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| D | G | S | S | W | D | G | Membrane acyltransferase | ||||||||
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| D | S | L | S | P | E | A | Polyketide synthase aa 997-1003 | ||||||||
S-Ag, retinal soluble antigen; IRBP, interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein; CRALBP, cellular retinaldehyde-binding protein, M. bovis, Mycobacterium bovis. Amino acids identical with the sequence of the retinal autoantigen are marked by grey fields.