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* Diabetes Center, Department of Medicine,
Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143;
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA 94305; and
¶ Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, Laennec Faculty of Medicine, University of Lyon, Lyon, France
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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cell autoantigen glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) 65,
are often maintained for decades following the disappearance of a
measurable
cell function (5). Pancreatic
cell
destruction resulting in development of type 1 diabetes appears to be
mediated by the Th1 subset of CD4 T cells and by CD8 T cells, whereas
autoantibodies do not seem to play a role (see Ref. 6 for
review). Yet in the nonobese diabetic (NOD) mouse model of type 1
diabetes, clinical signs of
cell failure do not develop in animals
carrying a mutation that results in B cell deficiency (7, 8). This protective effect appears to reflect a critical role of
B cells as APCs for initiating and maintaining autoimmune T cell
responses to pancreatic
cell autoantigens (9, 10, 11). In
contrast, skewing of the B cell repertoire toward a
cell
autoantigen promotes the development of diabetes in this model
(12). While there is evidence to suggest that type 1
diabetes can develop in the face of a severe depletion of mature B
cells in man (13), the disease process may be delayed
(14). In addition to the enhanced Ag uptake mediated by mIg of an Ag-presenting B cell, its Ab specificity may influence which T cell epitopes are processed and presented in the context of MHC class II Ags (15, 16). The endocytosed mIg-Ag complex is transported to late endosomal compartments, where the bound Ab can profoundly influence the proteolytic processing and loading onto MHC class II Ags. It has been proposed that an enhancement of the presentation of an epitope can occur when 1) the bound Ig protects it from proteolytic degradation and enhances its survival and therefore availability for binding to MHC class II Ags; 2) the bound Ig facilitates loading of the epitope into the peptide binding groove of MHC-class II Ags; and/or 3) the Ab suppresses presentation of other epitopes, thus increasing the availability of MHC class II molecules for a specific peptide binding in the peptide binding compartment. Conversely, suppression of the presentation of an epitope may result from a prolonged Ag-Fab association in late endosomes preventing processing into the appropriate peptide and/or from a steric blockade of the epitope (16).
The general effect of soluble Abs that form immune complexes with a protein is to enhance Ag uptake via the FcR on macrophages and dendritic cells, resulting in enhanced presentation by such cells. Numerous studies using soluble mAbs have shown that they enhance presentation of the Ag they bind to by facilitating Ag capture through the FcR (see Ref. 17 for review). Furthermore, a study using GAD65 autoantibody-positive sera from type 1 diabetic patients found an enhancement of presentation of a T cell determinant residing in aa 274286 when GAD65 immune complexes rather than Ag alone were fed to peripheral blood APCs (18). The epitope specificity of a soluble Ab that binds to an Ag before uptake via the FcR can also affect the processing and presentation of T cell epitopes and either suppress or boost a particular epitope (15, 16). While boosting effects may be difficult to separate from the general enhancement of uptake of immune complexes compared with free Ag, relative suppressing effects are more easily demonstrated. For instance, a mouse mAb to thyroglobulin was found to exert a relative suppression on the presentation of a nondominant epitope in this molecule (19). Thus, Ab specificities are likely to modulate the T cell epitopes made available by all three APCs: macrophages, dendritic cells, and B lymphocytes.
Recently, we have mapped in detail the GAD65-specific epitopes recognized by human mAbs derived from type 1 diabetic patients and shown that almost the entire surface of native folded GAD65 is targeted by human autoimmune B cells (20). In this study we assess how the epitope specificities of four corresponding EBV-transformed DRB1*0401-positive B cell lines affect immunodominant T cell epitopes generated from regions within and outside the B cell epitope region. Furthermore, we have studied how soluble Abs from the same B cell lines affect T cell epitopes presented by DRB1*0401-positive splenocytes.
| Materials and Methods |
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The derivation of EBV-transformed, GAD65-specific, monoclonal B
cell lines DPA, DPB, DPC, and DPD from an HLA-DRB1*0401-positive type 1
diabetic patient was described previously (21). The B cell
lines have a stable production of IgG1 in tissue culture
(21), and the epitopes have been mapped using homologue
scanning mutagenesis, taking advantage of the lack of reactivity of the
human mAbs with the highly homologous isoform GAD67 (20).
The Abs recognize four distinct conformational epitopes in the
N-terminal domain (DPB, DPD), middle domain (DPC), and C-terminal
domain (DPA) (20) (Fig. 1
).
Their affinity constant (Kd) for binding to
GAD65, determined by surface plasmon resonance on BIAcore, is 0.11 nM
for DPA, 9.45 nM for DPB, 0.31 nM for DPC, and 2.79 nM for DPD (A.-M.
Madec, unpublished observations). The B cell lines were grown in RPMI
1640 medium (Life Technologies/BRL, Gaithersburg, MD) containing 10%
heat-inactivated FCS, 2 mM L-glutamine, 100 U/ml
penicillin, 100 µg/ml streptomycin, and 50 µM 2-ME (tissue culture
medium). Abs were purified from culture supernatant by G4B fast flow
(Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) affinity chromatography. The eluate was
dialyzed against PBS. The human mAb concentration was determined using
an IgG ELISA kit (Roche, Mannheim, Germany).
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The derivation of HLA-DRB1*0401-restricted, GAD65-specific T cell hybridomas from mice expressing HLA-DRA*0101, DRB1*0401, and human CD4 as transgenes on the I-Ab-/- background was described previously (22). The hybridomas 91, 103, and 81 recognizing aa 271285, 481495, and 556570 in GAD65, respectively, were used in this study. A fourth HLA-DRB1*0401-restricted, GAD65-specific T cell hybridoma, recognizing aa 115130 (23), was donated by Dr. L. Wicker (Sharp and Dohme Research Laboratories, Merck, Rahway, NJ). T cell hybridomas were maintained in tissue culture medium (see above).
GAD65 protein
Human GAD65, expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and purified as described (24), was donated by Drs. M. Powell, B. Rees-Smith, and J. Furmaniak (FIRS Laboratories, Cardiff, U.K.). The purified protein was conformationally stable and was recognized by a series of human mAbs recognizing conformational epitopes in GAD65, including the mAbs used in this study (results not shown).
Ag presentation assays
B cells as APCs. EBV-transformed, GAD65-specific B cell lines were incubated with graded amounts of Ag for 1 h on ice and then washed twice in tissue culture medium to remove unbound Ag. Ag-loaded B cells (3 x 105) were added to each well of a round-bottom 96-well plate containing 1.5 x 105 GAD65-specific T cell hybridomas in a final volume of 150 µl tissue culture medium. The cells were incubated for 24 h (37°C, 4% CO2). The HLA-DRB1*0401-positive human EBV-transformed B cell line, Priess (25), which does not express a GAD65-specific IgG was used as a negative control. IL-2 secretion was measured using a sandwich immunoassay and a streptavidin-europium detection system (26). Experiments were repeated a minimum of three times in triplicate wells.
Splenocytes as APCs. Preformed immune complexes were generated by incubating 1.5 µg/ml purified human mAbs and graded amounts of Ag (0.033.0 µg/ml) in a round-bottom 96-well plate for 1 h at room temperature before addition of APCs. Splenocytes were prepared from HLA-DR A1*0101+/+, B1*0401+/+, hCD4+/+, I-Ab-/- transgenic mice (23) and used as APCs. Splenocytes (3 x 105 cells/well in 50 µl tissue culture medium) were incubated with graded amounts of Ag alone, peptide alone, or the preformed immune complexes for 1 h before addition of T cell hybridomas (1.5 x 105 cells in 100 µl tissue culture medium were added per well). After 24-h incubation, the samples were processed for measurement of IL-2 secretion as described above.
FcR blockade
The rat anti-mouse FcR mAb 2.4G2 (IgG2b) was used to block FcRII receptor uptake of immune complexes. The mAb was purified from supernatants of HB197 cells (American Type Culture Collection, Manassas, VA) using G4B Fast Flow (Sigma) column affinity chromatography and added to splenocyte experiments (10 µg/ml) using preformed immune complexes as Ag.
| Results |
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The four EBV-transformed monoclonal HLA-DRB1*0401-positive
monoclonal B cell lines used in this study recognize four distinct
conformational epitopes residing on the surface of the GAD65 molecule
(20). Fig. 1
shows the linear and spatial relationships
between the B cell epitopes of these four lines compared with four
immunodominant GAD65 T cell epitopes recognized by
HLA-DRB1*0401-restricted T cell hybridomas (22, 23). DPB
and DPD B cells recognize distinct conformational epitopes in the
N-terminal domain of GAD65, which were mapped to aa 39173 and
96173, respectively (20). The determinant of the T35 T
cell hybridoma (aa 115130) overlaps or is adjacent to the DPB and DPD
epitopes. The third B cell line, DPA, recognizes a conformational
epitope residing in the C-terminal domain of GAD65, involving residues
in aa 483499 and 556585. In particular, H568 is critical for
binding (20). The epitopes of two of the T cell
hybridomas, HY103 (aa 481495) and HY81 (aa 556570), overlap or are
proximal to the DPA epitope. The fourth B cell line, DPC, recognizes a
conformational epitope residing in the middle domain of GAD65 and
involving aa 231234 and 366413. The epitope of the fourth T cell
hybridoma, HY91 (aa 271285), localizes to the same domain, but does
not overlap with the DPC epitope (Fig. 1
). Thus, in contrast to the
DPA, DPB, and DPD epitopes, the DPC epitope does not overlap with a T
cell determinant recognized by the panel of T cell hybridomas. In the
three dimensional model of the middle and C-terminal regions of GAD65
(20), the HY103 and HY81 epitopes are exposed on the
surface of the GAD65 dimer, while the HY91 epitope is at the interface
between the middle and C-terminal domains, which form a sandwich in
each monomer (Fig. 2
). It is therefore
buried in the native GAD65 molecule. A three-dimensional model of the
N-terminal region is not available. However, in the predicted secondary
structure of GAD65 (20) the determinant of the T35 T cell
hybridoma (aa 115130) resides in an amphipathic
helix, the
hydrophilic phase of which is likely to be exposed on the surface of
native GAD65 (20).
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We evaluated the ability of the DPA, DPB, DPC, and DPD B cell
lines to process and present GAD65 to the four T cell hybridomas used
in this study (Fig. 3
). The Priess B cell
line, which shares the HLA-DRB1*0401 haplotype with the DP-B cells, but
does not recognize GAD65 epitopes, was used as a control APC. All the
DP-B cell lines elicited similar IL-2 responses from the
DRB1*0401-restricted, GAD65-specific T cells used in this study when
synthetic GAD65 peptides were used as an Ag, indicative of a similar
expression level of HLA-DRB1*0401 on their surface. The Priess cell
line presented synthetic GAD65 peptides to DRB1*0401-restricted
GAD65-specific T cells more efficiently than any of the DP-B cell lines
(results not shown), consistent with a higher expression level of
HLA-DRB1*0401 on its surface.
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In summary, the autoimmune GAD65-specific B cell lines appear to
efficiently present T cell epitopes residing outside their Ab epitope
region, while presentation of T cell determinants that reside
within the Ab-bound region of GAD65 is suppressed in a dominant fashion
(Table I
).
Ab binding and presentation of immune complexes by macrophages and dendritic cells
We next analyzed whether the inhibiting effect of the DPA, DPB, and DPD B cell lines on processing and presentation of T cell epitopes located within their Ab-bound GAD65 regions was also relevant when immune complexes were taken up, processed, and presented by APCs like macrophages and dendritic cells. For these experiments purified GAD65 or GAD65 in an immune complex with DPA, DPB, DPC, or DPD Abs was incubated with HLA-DRB1*0401-positive splenocytes, which were then used to stimulate the T cell hybridomas. The binding of immune complexes by the FcRII receptor on macrophages enhances their uptake compared with Ag alone (17).
Compared with incubation with Ag alone, the incubation of splenocytes
with GAD65 in an immune complex with DPA, DPB, DPC, or DPD Abs resulted
in a severalfold enhanced stimulation of the HY91 hybridoma,
recognizing the 271285 peptide (Fig. 4
A). Similarly, the
presentation of peptides 115130, 481495, and 556570 was
severalfold enhanced following incubation of splenocytes with GAD65 in
an immune complex with purified DP Abs, which do not recognize epitopes
that overlap with those peptides (Fig. 4
). In contrast, loading of a
complex between GAD65 and DPA Ab, which recognizes an epitope
overlapping with the 481495, and 556570 peptides, resulted in an
inhibition of their presentation to levels similar to that with Ag
alone (Fig. 4
, B and C), with a more complete
inhibition of epitope 556570. Likewise, loading of a complex between
GAD65 and either DPB or DPD Abs, which recognize B cell epitopes
overlapping with or adjacent to the 115130 epitope, resulted in an
inhibition of its presentation compared with DPA and DPC Abs, with DPB
Ab inhibiting presentation more completely than DPD (Fig. 4
D). Thus, purified DPA, DPB, and DPD Abs in an immune
complex with GAD65 inhibited presentation of T cell epitopes by
macrophages in a similar manner as when the corresponding B cells were
used for Ag presentation.
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| Discussion |
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The findings of epitope suppression are consistent with earlier studies in which tetanus toxin-specific mIg as well as the corresponding soluble Abs suppressed the processing and presentation of T cell determinants within the footprint of the Ab (15, 16). In previous studies a detailed mapping of the B cell epitopes in tetanus toxin was not available. Instead, the suppressed T cell determinants were found to be localized within the Ab footprint, i.e., the Ag fragment that is protected by Ab during limited proteolysis and usually encompasses a larger area than the Ab epitope. In one case, the Ab footprint included both a T cell epitope that was suppressed and an epitope that was enhanced by Ab binding (16). Based on these results, Simitsek et al. (16) proposed a model in which the processing and MHC class II loading of a T cell epitope residing in the actual Ab contact site (epitope) are suppressed, while the loading of a nearby epitope residing inside the footprint but outside the actual binding site is favored. The present study has identified three cases of effective suppression of immunodominant DRB1*0401-restricted T cell determinants residing within or adjacent to regions constituting the epitope of human monoclonal GAD65 autoantibodies arising in type 1 diabetes. We did not identify a T cell epitope whose processing/presentation were relatively enhanced by Ab binding to the epitope area, but the possibility is not excluded by this limited set of B cell lines and T cell hybridomas.
Both immunization of DRB1*0401-positive transgenic mice (22, 23) and derivation of human T cell lines from human patients (28) have identified the aa 271285 determinant as perhaps the most immunodominant DRB1*0401-restricted T cell epitope in the GAD65 molecule. In the three-dimensional model of the middle and C-terminal regions of GAD65, the 271285 epitope is buried in the native folded molecule. This is in contrast to both the aa 481495 and 556570 T cell epitopes, which are exposed on the surface. More than 95% of type 1 diabetic patients exclusively make autoantibodies to conformational epitopes on the surface of the native GAD65 molecule (Ref. 20 and references therein). The aa 271285 T cell epitope does not, therefore, appear to reside in the Ab binding site of a typical autoimmune B cell in type 1 diabetes. For example, while the epitopes of two other human mAbs derived from diabetic patients, MICA 6 and MICA 10, have been mapped close to the 271285 T cell epitope (242282 region), both Abs bind the surface of native intact GAD65, suggesting that the buried 271285 residues are not part of the epitope. Furthermore, in experiments using splenocytes as APCs, MICA 10 in an immune complex with GAD65 does not suppress presentation of the 271285 determinant (W. Richter, J. C. Jaume, S. L. Parry, G. Sønderstrup, and S. Baekkeskov, unpublished observations). We hypothesize that the absence of B cell reactivity to the aa 271285 region, and the consequent absence of suppression of processing and presentation of T cell determinants in this region by B cells and APCs may contribute to the immunodominance of this epitope.
Taken together, our results suggest that autoimmune GAD65-specific B cells not only serve a critical function as APCs in type 1 diabetes, but also play a major role in shaping the epitope specificity of the autoimmune T cell response to GAD65. Thus, autoimmune GAD65-specific B cells and the Abs they secrete appear to modulate the autoimmune T cell repertoire by down-regulating T cell epitopes in an immunodominant area while boosting epitopes in distant regions, providing a mechanism for autoimmune T cell epitope spreading.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Steinunn Baekkeskov, Diabetes Center, University of California, 513 Parnassus Avenue, Room HSW 1090, San Francisco, CA 94143-0534. E-mail address: s_baekkeskov{at}biochem.ucsf.edu ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: mIg, membrane-bound Ig; GAD, glutamic acid decarboxylase; NOD, nonobese diabetic. ![]()
Received for publication February 28, 2002. Accepted for publication May 10, 2002.
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1*0401) transgenic mice. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 94:8082.This article has been cited by other articles:
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