Tian J, Lehmann P V, Kaufman D L
Department of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology, University of California, Los Angeles 90024-1735.
J Exp Med. 1994 Nov 1;180(5):1979-84. doi: 10.1084/jem.180.5.1979.
Limited regions of amino acid sequence similarity frequently occur between microbial antigens and host proteins. It has been widely anticipated that during infection such sequence similarities could induce cross-reactive T cell responses, thereby initiating T cell-mediated autoimmune disease. However, the nature of major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-restricted antigen presentation confers a number of constraints that should make this type of T cell cross-reactivity a rare, MHC allele-dependent event. We tested this prediction using two insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM)-associated antigens, coxsackievirus P2-C (Cox P2-C) protein and glutamate decarboxylase (GAD65), which share a prototypic sequence similarity of six consecutive amino acids within otherwise unrelated proteins. We surveyed a panel of 10 murine MHC class II alleles that encompass the spectrum of standard alleles for the ability to cross-reactively present Cox P2-C and GAD65. Out of the 10 restriction elements tested, the sequence similarity regions were both dominant determinants and were cross-reactively displayed after the natural processing of whole antigens, only in the context of I-Anod. These data show that cross-reactive T cell recognition of sequence similarity regions in unrelated proteins is confined to certain MHC alleles, which may explain MHC association with autoimmune disease. It is striking that these two diabetes-associated antigens were cross-reactively recognized only in the context of a diabetes susceptibility allele. Since the human and the murine class II alleles associated with IDDM share conserved features, cross-reactive T cell recognition of GAD65 and Cox P2-C may contribute to the pathogenesis of human IDDM and account for the epidemiological association of coxsackievirus with IDDM.
微生物抗原与宿主蛋白之间经常出现有限区域的氨基酸序列相似性。人们普遍预期,在感染过程中,这种序列相似性可能会诱导交叉反应性T细胞反应,从而引发T细胞介导的自身免疫性疾病。然而,主要组织相容性复合体(MHC)限制的抗原呈递的性质带来了一些限制,这应该会使这种类型的T细胞交叉反应成为一种罕见的、依赖MHC等位基因的事件。我们使用两种与胰岛素依赖型糖尿病(IDDM)相关的抗原,柯萨奇病毒P2-C(Cox P2-C)蛋白和谷氨酸脱羧酶(GAD65)来检验这一预测,这两种抗原在其他不相关的蛋白中共享六个连续氨基酸的典型序列相似性。我们调查了一组包含标准等位基因谱的10个小鼠MHC II类等位基因,以检测它们交叉呈递Cox P2-C和GAD65的能力。在测试的10个限制元件中,序列相似性区域都是主要决定因素,并且仅在I-A等位基因的背景下,在全抗原的自然加工后会交叉呈递。这些数据表明,不相关蛋白中序列相似性区域的交叉反应性T细胞识别仅限于某些MHC等位基因,这可能解释了MHC与自身免疫性疾病的关联。引人注目的是,这两种与糖尿病相关的抗原仅在糖尿病易感等位基因的背景下被交叉反应性识别。由于与IDDM相关的人类和小鼠II类等位基因具有保守特征,GAD65和Cox P2-C的交叉反应性T细胞识别可能有助于人类IDDM的发病机制,并解释柯萨奇病毒与IDDM的流行病学关联。