HLA-DR15 Molecules Jointly Shape an Autoreactive T Cell Repertoire in Multiple Sclerosis

  • Jian Wang
  • Ivan Jelcic
  • Lena Mühlenbruch
  • Veronika Haunerdinger
  • Nora C Toussaint
  • Yingdong Zhao
  • Carolina Cruciani
  • Wolfgang Faigle
  • Reza Naghavian
  • Magdalena Foege
  • Thomas M C Binder
  • Thomas Eiermann
  • Lennart Opitz
  • Laura Fuentes-Font
  • Richard Reynolds
  • William W Kwok
  • Julie T Nguyen
  • Jar-How Lee
  • Andreas Lutterotti
  • Christian Münz
  • Hans-Georg Rammensee
  • Mathias Hauri-Hohl
  • Mireia Sospedra
  • Stefan Stevanovic
  • Roland Martin

Beteiligte Einrichtungen

Abstract

The HLA-DR15 haplotype is the strongest genetic risk factor for multiple sclerosis (MS), but our understanding of how it contributes to MS is limited. Because autoreactive CD4+ T cells and B cells as antigen-presenting cells are involved in MS pathogenesis, we characterized the immunopeptidomes of the two HLA-DR15 allomorphs DR2a and DR2b of human primary B cells and monocytes, thymus, and MS brain tissue. Self-peptides from HLA-DR molecules, particularly from DR2a and DR2b themselves, are abundant on B cells and thymic antigen-presenting cells. Furthermore, we identified autoreactive CD4+ T cell clones that can cross-react with HLA-DR-derived self-peptides (HLA-DR-SPs), peptides from MS-associated foreign agents (Epstein-Barr virus and Akkermansia muciniphila), and autoantigens presented by DR2a and DR2b. Thus, both HLA-DR15 allomorphs jointly shape an autoreactive T cell repertoire by serving as antigen-presenting structures and epitope sources and by presenting the same foreign peptides and autoantigens to autoreactive CD4+ T cells in MS.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0092-8674
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 25.11.2020
PubMed 33091337