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Islet-Derived CD4 T Cells Targeting Proinsulin in Human Autoimmune Diabetes
Author(s) -
Aaron W. Michels,
Laurie G. Landry,
Kristen A. McDaniel,
Liping Yu,
Martha CampbellThompson,
William W. Kwok,
Kenneth L. Jones,
Peter A. Gottlieb,
John W. Kappler,
Qizhi Tang,
Bart O. Roep,
Mark A. Atkinson,
Clayton E. Mathews,
Maki Nakayama
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
diabetes
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.219
H-Index - 330
eISSN - 1939-327X
pISSN - 0012-1797
DOI - 10.2337/db16-1025
Subject(s) - proinsulin , islet , insulin , medicine , diabetes mellitus , endocrinology , type 1 diabetes , human leukocyte antigen , pancreatic islets , autoimmune disease , antigen , immunology , major histocompatibility complex , t cell receptor , biology , immune system , t cell , antibody
Type 1 diabetes results from chronic autoimmune destruction of insulin-producing β-cells within pancreatic islets. Although insulin is a critical self-antigen in animal models of autoimmune diabetes, due to extremely limited access to pancreas samples, little is known about human antigenic targets for islet-infiltrating T cells. Here we show that proinsulin peptides are targeted by islet-infiltrating T cells from patients with type 1 diabetes. We identified hundreds of T cells from inflamed pancreatic islets of three young organ donors with type 1 diabetes with a short disease duration with high-risk HLA genes using a direct T-cell receptor (TCR) sequencing approach without long-term cell culture. Among 85 selected CD4 TCRs tested for reactivity to preproinsulin peptides presented by diabetes-susceptible HLA-DQ and HLA-DR molecules, one T cell recognized C-peptide amino acids 19–35, and two clones from separate donors responded to insulin B-chain amino acids 9–23 (B:9–23), which are known to be a critical self-antigen–driving disease progress in animal models of autoimmune diabetes. These B:9–23–specific T cells from islets responded to whole proinsulin and islets, whereas previously identified B:9–23 responsive clones from peripheral blood did not, highlighting the importance of proinsulin-specific T cells in the islet microenvironment.

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