Publication | Open Access
Cytomegalovirus in autoimmunity: T cell crossreactivity to viral antigen and autoantigen glutamic acid decarboxylase
201
Citations
28
References
2001
Year
ImmunologyT Cell CrossreactivityAntigen ProcessingHcmv-derived EpitopeT CellsImmune SystemImmunotherapySynthetic ImmunologyNeuroimmunologyViral AntigenSynthetic Peptide LibrariesAutoimmune DiseaseAllergyNeurovirologyVirologyAutoimmunityT Cell ImmunityChronic Viral InfectionAntiviral ResponseSystems BiologyMedicine
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.
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