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Human 60-kDa Heat Shock Protein Is a Target Autoantigen of T Cells Derived from Atherosclerotic Plaques
Author(s) -
Marisa Benagiano,
Mario Milco D’Elios,
Amedeo Amedei,
Annalisa Azzurri,
Ruurd van der Zee,
Alessandra Ciervo,
Gianni Rombolà,
Sergio Romagnani,
Antonio Cassone,
Gianfranco Del Prete
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.174.10.6509
Subject(s) - heat shock protein , biology , molecular mimicry , immune system , epitope , immunology , t cell , microbiology and biotechnology , antibody , biochemistry , gene
Epidemiological studies suggest the potential importance of an inflammatory component in atherosclerosis and support the hypothesis that immune responses to Ags of pathogens cross-react with homologous host proteins due to molecular mimicry. Protein candidates involved may be the stress-induced proteins known as heat shock proteins (HSP). In this study, we report that atherosclerotic plaques harbor in vivo-activated CD4(+) T cells that recognize the human 60-kDa HSP. Such in vivo-activated 60-kDa HSP-specific T cells are not detectable in the peripheral blood. In patients with positive serology and PCR for Chlamydia pneumoniae DNA, but not in patients negative for both, most of plaque-derived T cells specific for human 60-kDa HSP also recognized the C. pneumoniae 60-kDa HSP. We characterized the submolecular specificity of such 60-kDa HSP-specific plaque-derived T cells and identified both the self- and cross-reactive epitopes of that autoantigen. On challenge with human 60-kDa HSP, most of the plaque-derived T cells expressed Th type 1 functions, including cytotoxicity and help for monocyte tissue factor production. We suggest that arterial endothelial cells, undergoing classical atherosclerosis risk factors and conditioned by Th type 1 cytokines, express self 60-kDa HSP, which becomes target for both autoreactive T cells and cross-reactive T cells to microbial 60-kDa HSP via a mechanism of molecular mimicry. This hypothesis is in agreement with the notion that immunization with HSP exacerbates atherosclerosis, whereas immunosuppression and T cell depletion prevent the formation of arteriosclerotic lesions in experimental animals.

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