Cytomegalovirus in autoimmunity: T cell crossreactivity to viral antigen and autoantigen glutamic acid decarboxylase


Autoria(s): Hiemstra, Hoebert S.; Schloot, Nanette C.; van Veelen, Peter A.; Willemen, Sabine J. M.; Franken, Kees L. M. C.; van Rood, Jon J.; de Vries, René R. P.; Chaudhuri, Abhijit; Behan, Peter O.; Drijfhout, Jan W.; Roep, Bart O.
Data(s)

27/03/2001

Resumo

Antigens of pathogenic microbes that mimic autoantigens are thought to be responsible for the activation of autoreactive T cells. Viral infections have been associated with the development of the neuroendocrine autoimmune diseases type 1 diabetes and stiff-man syndrome, but the mechanism is unknown. These diseases share glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD65) as a major autoantigen. We screened synthetic peptide libraries dedicated to bind to HLA-DR3, which predisposes to both diseases, using clonal CD4+ T cells reactive to GAD65 isolated from a prediabetic stiff-man syndrome patient. Here we show that these GAD65-specific T cells crossreact with a peptide of the human cytomegalovirus (hCMV) major DNA-binding protein. This peptide was identified after database searching with a recognition pattern that had been deduced from the library studies. Furthermore, we showed that hCMV-derived epitope can be naturally processed by dendritic cells and recognized by GAD65 reactive T cells. Thus, hCMV may be involved in the loss of T cell tolerance to autoantigen GAD65 by a mechanism of molecular mimicry leading to autoimmunity.

Identificador

/pmc/articles/PMC31166/

/pubmed/11274421

http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.071050898

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

The National Academy of Sciences

Direitos

Copyright © 2001, The National Academy of Sciences

Palavras-Chave #Biological Sciences
Tipo

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