| Literature DB >> 33986758 |
Brendan K Reed1,2,3, John W Kappler1,2,3,4.
Abstract
The T cell antigens driving autoimmune Type 1 Diabetes (T1D) have been pursued for more than three decades. When diabetogenic CD4 T cell clones and their relevant MHCII antigen presenting alleles were first identified in rodents and humans, the path to discovering the peptide epitopes within pancreatic beta cell proteins seemed straightforward. However, as experimental results accumulated, definitive data were often absent or controversial. Work within the last decade has helped to clear up some of the controversy by demonstrating that a number of the important MHCII presented epitopes are not encoded in the natural beta cell proteins, but in fact are fusions between peptide fragments derived from the same or different proteins. Recently, the mechanism for generating these MHCII diabetogenic chimeric epitopes has been attributed to a form of reverse proteolysis, called transpeptidation, a process that has been well-documented in the production of MHCI presented epitopes. In this mini-review we summarize these data and their implications for T1D and other autoimmune responses.Entities:
Keywords: CD4 T cell; antigen; antigen presenting cell; beta cell; chimeric peptide; immune tolerance; transpeptidation; type 1 diabetes mellitus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33986758 PMCID: PMC8111216 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.669986
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Chimeric Peptides Derived from Insulin B:9-23, ChgA-WE14 or pro-IAPP.
| Acceptor | Donor | Fusion Epitope Sequence | Active T Cell Clone | Synthetic chimeric peptide active | Chimeric peptide found in beta cells | Fused by cathepsin L | Ref | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sequence | Source | Sequence | Source | ||||||
| VEALYLVCGE | m/h Insulin B:9-23 | EVE | mC-peptide | VEALYLVCGEEVE | 12-4.1 | + | – | – | ( |
| " | " | DLQ | VEALYLVCGEDLQ | + | – | – | ( | ||
| " | " | EAE | hC-peptide | VEALYLVCGEEAE | T1D3 | + | – | – | ( |
| " | " | EDG | VEALYLVCGEEDQ | + | – | – | ( | ||
| " | " | ELG | VEALYLVCGEELG | + | – | – | ( | ||
| VEALYLVCG | " | GDLQ | mC-peptide | VEALYLVCGGDLQ | 8F10 | + | – | – | ( |
| " | " | VEQL | VEALYLVCGVEQL | 12-4.4 | + | – | – | ( | |
| " | " | LEVA | VEALYLVCGLEVA | + | – | – | ( | ||
| TLAL | mC-peptide | WSRMDQL | mChgA-WE14 | TLALWSRMDQL | BDC-10.1 | + | + | + | ( |
| QLAL | mSecretogranin2 | " | QLALWSRMDQL | + | – | – | ( | ||
| RIPV | " | " | RIPVWSRMDQL | BDC-2.5 | + | – | – | ( | |
| TIAL | mSecretogranin3 | " | TIALWSRMDQL | BDC-10.1 | + | – | + | ( | |
| TLTL | " | " | TLTLWSRMDQL | + | – | + | ( | ||
| ERIL | mChgA | " | ERILWSRMDQL | BDC-2.5 | + | – | + | ( | |
| ILSI | " | " | ILSIWSRMDQL | BDC-10.1 | + | – | – | ( | |
| DLAL | " | " | DLALWSRMDQL | + | – | + | ( | ||
| TLAL | mC-peptide | NAARD | NOD lAPP | TLALNAARD | BDC-6.9 | + | + | + | ( |
| " | " | NAAGD | BALB/c lAPP | TLALNAAGD | + | – | + | ( | |
This is a list of chimeric peptides derived from Insulin B:9-23, ChgA-WE14 or pro-IAPP and whether these peptides are capable of stimulating a panel of Diabetogenic T cell clones in vitro, have been discovered in Beta cells, and whether they are capable of being generated by Cathepsin L in vitro. The full length, stimulatory fusion epitope and cognate T cell(s) are listed.
Figure 1How Transpeptidation in Crinophagic Vesicles Could Create the Chimeric Epitopes Driving T1D. Within the pancreas exist a specialized multicellular network referred to as the Islets of Langerhans. Contained within these islets are the Insulin producing beta cells responsible for maintaining stable blood glucose levels among other neuroendocrine processes. The secretory granules within the beta cells contain prohormones like Proinsulin, Chromogranin A and ProIAPP, and their levels are continually regulated through a catabolic recycling process called crinophagy, whereby secretory granules are fused with lysosomes and their contents are degraded, recycled and secreted. Due to the high concentrations of beta cell hormone donor and acceptor proteins present within these crinophagic bodies, the biochemical conditions are optimal for the reverse proteolysis reaction, transpeptidation to occur. Cathepsin L is a protease capable of cleaving the hormone acceptor peptides (ex. Proinsulin C-peptide) and creating an enzyme linked intermediate complex with the acceptor peptide. Water is generally responsible for breaking this transient bond between the carbonyl carbon of the acceptor peptide and the a sulfur or oxygen in enzyme to complete the digestion, however when high concentrations of a donor peptide with a free N-terminus are present they can outcompete water and generate a new peptide product through transpeptidation. We propose these neo-peptides can be exocytosed and secreted out of the beta cells and to be taken up antigen presenting cells to and presented to diabetogenic CD4 T cells. These peptides are considerably more active than their germline encoded parental counterparts and their presentation can lead to T cell activation and destruction of the beta cells in the islets. This figure was created with Biorender.com.