par Jhala, Gaurang;Chee, Jonathan;Trivedi, Prerak M;Selck, Claudia;Gurzov, Esteban Nicolas ;Graham, Kate L;Thomas, Helen H.E.;Kay, Thomas W H TW;Krishnamurthy, Balasubramanian
Référence JCI insight, 1, 10, page (e86065)
Publication Publié, 2016-07
Référence JCI insight, 1, 10, page (e86065)
Publication Publié, 2016-07
Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : | High-affinity self-reactive thymocytes are purged in the thymus, and residual self-reactive T cells, which are detectable in healthy subjects, are controlled by peripheral tolerance mechanisms. Breakdown in these mechanisms results in autoimmune disease, but antigen-specific therapy to augment natural mechanisms can prevent this. We aimed to determine when antigen-specific therapy is most effective. Islet autoantigens, proinsulin (PI), and islet-specific glucose-6-phosphatase catalytic subunit-related protein (IGRP) were expressed in the antigen-presenting cells (APCs) of autoimmune diabetes-prone nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice in a temporally controlled manner. PI expression from gestation until weaning was sufficient to completely protect NOD mice from diabetes, insulitis, and development of insulin autoantibodies. Insulin-specific T cells were significantly diminished, were naive, and did not express IFN-γ when challenged. This long-lasting effect from a brief period of treatment suggests that autoreactive T cells are not produced subsequently. We tracked IGRP206-214-specific CD8(+) T cells in NOD mice expressing IGRP in APCs. When IGRP was expressed only until weaning, IGRP206-214-specific CD8(+) T cells were not detected later in life. Thus, anti-islet autoimmunity is determined during early life, and autoreactive T cells are not generated in later life. Bolstering tolerance to islet antigens in the perinatal period is sufficient to impart lasting protection from diabetes. |