AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study explores how sensitization to specific self-peptides can trigger different immune responses in relation to autoimmunity and tumor immunity, with a focus on two myelin peptides that lead to different forms of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE).
  • - Mice with monophasic EAE showed strong resistance to further EAE re-induction due to the presence of effective regulatory T-cells (Tregs) that were specifically tailored to recognize antigens, while those with relapsing EAE were more susceptible.
  • - The research indicates that modifying the flanking residues of certain peptides could enhance the stability of their interaction with immune cells, suggesting a potential therapeutic approach through "inverse vaccination" to achieve beneficial immune

Article Abstract

Sensitization to self-peptides induces various immunological responses, from autoimmunity to tumor immunity, depending on the peptide sequence; however, the underlying mechanisms remain unclear, and thus, curative therapeutic options considering immunity balance are limited. Herein, two overlapping dominant peptides of myelin proteolipid protein, PLP136-150 and PLP139-151, which induce different forms of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), monophasic and relapsing EAE, respectively, were investigated. Mice with monophasic EAE exhibited highly resistant to EAE re-induction with any encephalitogenic peptides, whereas mice with relapsing EAE were susceptible, and progressed, to EAE re-induction. This resistance to relapse and re-induction in monophasic EAE mice was associated with the maintenance of potent CD69CD103CD4CD25 regulatory T-cells (Tregs) enriched with antigen specificity, which expanded preferentially in the central nervous system with sustained suppressive activity. This tissue-preferential sustainability of potent antigen-specific Tregs was correlated with the antigenicity of PLP136-150, depending on its flanking residues. That is, the flanking residues of PLP136-150 enable to form pivotally arranged strong hydrogen bonds that secured its binding stability to MHC-class II. These potent Tregs acting tissue-preferentially were induced only by sensitization of PLP136-150, not by its tolerance induction, independent of EAE development. These findings suggest that, for optimal therapy, "benign autoimmunity" can be critically achieved through inverse vaccination with self-peptides by manipulating their flanking residues.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaut.2023.103094DOI Listing

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