4.6 Article

Low-dose peptide tolerance therapy of lupus generates plasmacytoid dendritic cells that cause expansion of autoantigen-specific regulatory T cells and contraction of inflammatory Th17 cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 178, Issue 12, Pages 7849-7858

Publisher

AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.178.12.7849

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Funding

  1. NIAID NIH HHS [R01 AI 41985] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIAMS NIH HHS [R37 AR 39157] Funding Source: Medline

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Subnanomolar doses of an unaltered, naturally occurring nucleosomal histone peptide epitope, H4(71-94), when injected s.c. into lupus-prone mice, markedly prolong lifespan by generating CD4(+)25(+) and CD8(+) regulatory T cells (Treg) producing TGF-P. The induced Treg cells suppress nuclear autoantigen-specific Th and B cells and block renal inflammation. Splenic dendritic cells (DC) captured the s.c.-injected H4(71-94) peptide rapidly and expressed a tolerogenic phenotype. The DC of the tolerized animal, especially plasmacytoid DC, produced increased amounts of TGF-beta, but diminished IL-6 on stimulation via the TLR-9 pathway by nucleosome autoantigen and other ligands; and those plasmacytoid DC blocked lupus autoinumme disease by simultaneously inducing autoantigen-specific Treg and suppressing inflammatory Th17 cells that infiltrated the kidneys of untreated lupus mice. Low-dose tolerance with H4(71-94) was effective even though the lupus immune system is spontaneously preprimed to react to the autoepitope. Thus, H4(71-94) peptide tolerance therapy that preferentially targets pathogenic autoimmune cells could spare lupus patients from chronically receiving toxic agents or global immunosuppressants and maintain remission by restoring autoantigen-specific Treg cells.

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