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Defining a T-cell epitope within HSP 65 in recurrent aphthous stomatitis. | LitMetric

Defining a T-cell epitope within HSP 65 in recurrent aphthous stomatitis.

Clin Exp Immunol

Department of Periodontology and Preventive Dentistry, GKT Dental Institute, London, UK.

Published: May 2002

AI Article Synopsis

  • The 65 kD heat shock protein (HSP) is linked to recurrent aphthous stomatitis (RAS), with a specific peptide (91-105) from mycobacterial HSP stimulating T cells in RAS patients.
  • CD4+ and CD8+ T cells show significant activation in response to the mycobacterial peptide, while only CD4+ T cells respond to its human counterpart, indicating different immune pathways.
  • Research suggests the importance of certain amino acids in the peptide for T cell stimulation, with implications that oral microbial HSP could trigger an immune response that contributes to the development of RAS.

Article Abstract

The 65 kD heat shock protein (HSP) has been implicated in the aetiology of recurrent aphthous stomatitis (RAS). We have previously demonstrated that peptide 91-105 derived from the sequence of mycobacterial 65 kD HSP stimulates specifically lymphocytes from patients with RAS. In this investigation, we show that both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells were significantly stimulated with mycobacterial peptide 91-105. In contrast, the human homologous peptide 116-130 stimulated only CD4+ T cells. Inhibition studies showed that CD4+ T cells were class II restricted, whereas CD8+ T cells were class I restricted. We then used truncated or substituted peptides, and demonstrated that residues 95-105 appear to be important, and residue 104(Arg) critical, in stimulating the T cells. Thus, peptide 95- 105 may constitute a T-cell proliferative epitope in RAS. We postulate that the high load of micro-organisms that colonize the oral mucosa may initiate an immune response by the microbial HSP 65-derived peptide 95-105, stimulating the numerous Langerhans cells in the oral mucosa to activate a cross-reacting immune response to the homologous peptide 116-130 within the epithelial HSP 60, initiating the immunopathological changes that lead to RAS.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1906391PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2249.2002.01757.xDOI Listing

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