Tolerogenic immune responses to novel T-cell epitopes from heat-shock protein 60 in juvenile idiopathic arthritis

S Kamphuis, W Kuis, W de Jager, G Teklenburg… - The Lancet, 2005 - thelancet.com
S Kamphuis, W Kuis, W de Jager, G Teklenburg, M Massa, G Gordon, M Boerhof, GT Rijkers
The Lancet, 2005thelancet.com
Background Juvenile idiopathic arthritis is a heterogeneous autoimmune disease
characterised by chronic inflammation of one or more joints. In patients with this disease, T-
cell reactivity to autologous heat-shock protein 60 (HSP60) is associated with a favourable
prognosis. We sought to identify HSP60 T-cell epitopes to find potential targets for HSP60
immunotherapy and to assess whether immune responses to these epitopes contribute to
the distinct clinical outcome of this disease. Methods We identified eight potential epitopes …
Background
Juvenile idiopathic arthritis is a heterogeneous autoimmune disease characterised by chronic inflammation of one or more joints. In patients with this disease, T-cell reactivity to autologous heat-shock protein 60 (HSP60) is associated with a favourable prognosis. We sought to identify HSP60 T-cell epitopes to find potential targets for HSP60 immunotherapy and to assess whether immune responses to these epitopes contribute to the distinct clinical outcome of this disease.
Methods
We identified eight potential epitopes using a computer algorithm from both self and microbial HSP60 binding to many HLA-DR molecules. We analysed the pattern of T-cell responses induced by these HSP60 peptides in peripheral-blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of 57 patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis, 27 healthy controls, and 20 disease controls. We undertook in-vitro MHC binding studies with the identified peptides, and HLA class II typing of a subset of patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis.
Findings
Five of the eight peptides identified yielded proliferative T-cell responses in 50–70% of PBMC from patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis irrespective of MHC genotype, but not in PBMC from healthy or disease controls. Although PBMC from both patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis and healthy controls produced interferon γ in response to these peptides, only PBMC from patients with the disease produced interleukin 10.
Interpretation
The recorded T-cell-induction in juvenile idiopathic arthritis is tolerogenic. In patients with oligoarticular disease, the immune responses to the HSP60 epitopes identified could contribute to disease remission.
Relevance to practice
The broad recognition of these HSP60 epitopes in a population of patients with polymorphic MHC genotypes opens the way for HSP60-peptide immunotherapy, representing a novel treatment option to specifically modulate the immune system in patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis.
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