|
|
Ania Skowera, Richard J. Ellis, Ruben Varela-Calviño, Sefina Arif, Guo Cai Huang, Cassie Van-Krinks, Anna Zaremba, Chloe Rackham, Jennifer S. Allen, Timothy I.M. Tree, Min Zhao, Colin M. Dayan, Andrew K. Sewell, Wendy Unger, Jan W. Drijfhout, Ferry Ossendorp, Bart O. Roep, Mark Peakman
J Clin Invest. 2008;
118(10):3390
doi:10.1172/JCI35449
Abstract |
Full text
| PDF
| Supplemental material

T
he final pathway of β cell destruction leading to insulin deficiency, hyperglycemia, and clinical type 1 diabetes is unknown. Here we show that circulating CTLs can kill β cells via recognition of a glucose-regulated epitope. First, we identified 2 naturally processed epitopes from the human preproinsulin signal peptide by elution from HLA-A2 (specifically, the protein encoded by the A*0201 allele) molecules. Processing of these was unconventional, requiring neither the proteasome nor transporter associated with processing (TAP). However, both epitopes were major targets for circulating effector CD8+ T cells from HLA-A2+ patients with type 1 diabetes. Moreover, cloned preproinsulin signal peptide–specific CD8+ T cells killed human β cells in vitro. Critically, at high glucose concentration, β cell presentation of preproinsulin signal epitope increased, as did CTL killing. This study provides direct evidence that autoreactive CTLs are present in the circulation of patients with type 1 diabetes and that they can kill human β cells. These results also identify a mechanism of self-antigen presentation that is under pathophysiological regulation and could expose insulin-producing β cells to increasing cytotoxicity at the later stages of the development of clinical diabetes. Our findings suggest that autoreactive CTLs are important targets for immune-based interventions in type 1 diabetes and argue for early, aggressive insulin therapy to preserve remaining β cells.
Citation information
This citation data is accumulated from CrossRef, which receives citation information from participating publishers, including this journal.
Not all publishers participate in CrossRef, so this information is not comprehensive.
Additionally, data may not reflect the most current citations to this article,
and the data may differ from citation information available from other sources
(for example, Google Scholar, Web of Science, and Scopus).
Total citations by year
in CrossRef
Citations to this article
in CrossRef
(3)
| Title and authors |
Publication |
Year |
Antigen-Based Immune Therapeutics for Type 1 Diabetes: Magic Bullets or Ordinary Blanks?
Slobodan Culina, Christian Boitard, Roberto Mallone
|
Clinical and Developmental Immunology
|
2011 |
Discovery of low-affinity preproinsulin epitopes and detection of autoreactive CD8 T-cells using combinatorial MHC multimers
Wendy W. Unger, Jurjen Velthuis, Joana R.F. Abreu, Sandra Laban, Edwin Quinten, Michel G.D. Kester, Sine Reker-Hadrup, Arnold H. Bakker, Gaby Duinkerken, Arend Mulder, Kees L.M.C. Franken, Robert Hilbrands, Bart Keymeulen, Mark Peakman, Ferry Ossendorp, Jan Wouter Drijfhout, Ton N. Schumacher, Bart O. Roep
|
Journal of Autoimmunity
|
2011 |
T Cell Recognition of Autoantigens in Human Type 1 Diabetes: Clinical Perspectives
Roberto Mallone, Vedran Brezar, Christian Boitard
|
Clinical and Developmental Immunology
|
2011 |
|