AI Article Synopsis

  • Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is an autoimmune disease where T-cells attack insulin-producing beta cells, and full-length C-peptide is recognized as a significant antigen involved in this process.
  • Researchers investigated whether modifying glutamine residues in C-peptide to glutamic acid (a process called deamidation) would enhance the immune response, using CD4 T-cell lines specific to C-peptide.
  • The study found that deamidation did not significantly increase the immune response to C-peptide; in fact, responses to deamidated C-peptide were generally weaker than to unmodified C-peptide, suggesting that deamidated C-peptide is not a major player in T1D autoimmunity.

Article Abstract

Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is a T-cell mediated autoimmune disease in which the insulin-producing beta cells are destroyed. While it is clear that full-length C-peptide, derived from proinsulin, is a major antigen in human T1D it is not clear how and why C-peptide becomes a target of the autoimmune CD4 T-cell responses in T1D. Neoepitopes formed by the conversion of glutamine (Q) residues to glutamic acid (E) by deamidation are central to the immune pathogenesis of coeliac disease and have been implicated in autoimmune responses in T1D. Here, we asked if the immunogenicity of full-length C-peptide, which comprises four glutamine residues, was enhanced by deamidation, which we mimicked by substituting glutamic acid for glutamine residue. First, we used a panel of 18 well characterized CD4 T-cell lines specific for epitopes derived from human C-peptide. In all cases, when the substitution fell within the cognate epitope the response was diminished, or in a few cases unchanged. In contrast, when the substitution fell outside the epitope recognized by the TCR responses were unchanged or slightly augmented. Second, we compared CD4 T-cell proliferation responses, against deamidated and unmodified C-peptide, in the peripheral blood of people with or without T1D using the CFSE-based proliferation assay. While, as reported previously, responses were detected to unmodified C-peptide, no deamidated C-peptide was consistently more stimulatory than native C-peptide. Overall responses were weaker to deamidated C-peptide compared to unmodified C-peptide. Hence, we conclude that deamidated C-peptide does not play a role in beta-cell autoimmunity in people with T1D.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9811213PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jtauto.2022.100180DOI Listing

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