T-cell molecular mimicry in Chagas disease: identification and partial structural analysis of multiple cross-reactive epitopes between Trypanosoma cruzi B13 and cardiac myosin heavy chain.
نویسندگان
چکیده
Chagas disease cardiomyopathy (CCC) is one of the few examples of post-infectious autoimmunity, where infectious episodes with an established pathogen, the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, clearly triggers molecular mimicry-related target organ immune damage. CD4+ T-cell clones infiltrating hearts from CCC patients cross-reactively recognize human cardiac myosin, the major heart protein, and the immunodominant B13 protein from T. cruzi. Moreover, in vitro priming with B13 leads to the recovery of cardiac myosin cross-reactive T-cell clones. In order to identify cross-reactive epitopes between B13 protein and human cardiac myosin, we used B13 peptide S15.4, preferentially recognized by CCC patients, to establish a T-cell clone from an HLA-DQ7 individual. The B13 S15.4 peptide-specific CD4+ T-cell clone 3E5 was tested in proliferation assays against 15 Lys/His-substituted S15.4-derived peptides for TCR/HLA contact analysis. Together with previous HLA-binding data and molecular modeling of the HLA-DQ7-peptide S15.4 complex, Lys/His scanning analysis showed eight TCR/HLA contact positions. Clone 3E5 was also tested against 45 15-mer peptides from human beta-cardiac myosin heavy chain bearing the central HLA-DQ7 binding motif. Clone 3E5 recognized 13 peptides from cardiac myosin. The alignment of cross-reactive peptides in cardiac myosin showed very limited sharing of residues or side chains with similar chemical/structural features at aligned positions, indicative of a very degenerate TCR recognition pattern. The existence of degenerate intramolecular recognition, with multiple low-homology, cross-reactive epitopes in a single autoantigenic protein may have implications in increasing the magnitude of the autoimmune response in CCC and other autoimmune diseases.
منابع مشابه
Autoimmunity in Chagas' disease. Identification of cardiac myosin-B13 Trypanosoma cruzi protein crossreactive T cell clones in heart lesions of a chronic Chagas' cardiomyopathy patient.
Heart tissue destruction in chronic Chagas' disease cardiomyopathy (CCC) may be caused by autoimmune recognition of heart tissue by a mononuclear cell infiltrate decades after Trypanosoma cruzi infection. Indirect evidence suggests there is molecular mimicry between T. cruzi and heart tissue. In murine models of CCC, antibodies and CD4+ T cells recognize myosin, the major heart protein. We rece...
متن کاملMolecular mimicry between cardiac myosin and Trypanosoma cruzi antigen B13: identification of a B13-driven human T cell clone that recognizes cardiac myosin.
Previous reports from our group have demonstrated the association of molecular mimicry between cardiac myosin and the immunodominant Trypanosoma cruzi protein B13 with chronic Chagas' disease cardiomyopathy at both the antibody and heart-infiltrating T cell level. At the peripheral blood level, we observed no difference in primary proliferative responses to T. cruzi B13 protein between chronic ...
متن کاملInfection, mimics, and autoimmune disease.
observation that infection can precipitate an autoimmune disease dates back more than a century. The first human autoimmune disease described, paroxysmal cold hemoglobulinuria, was thought of as a late consequence of syphilis, and rheumatic fever is still associated with preceding streptococcal infection. In modern times, these associations have been attributed to molecular mimicry. In its simp...
متن کاملEvidence for T Cell Help in the IgG Response against Tandemly Repetitive Trypanosoma cruzi B13 Protein in Chronic Chagas Disease Patients
The tandemly repetitive Trypanosoma cruzi B13 protein is an immunodominant antigen among Chagas disease patients. Such repetitive domains may behave as T-independent antigens. However, T cells can recognize B13 epitopes in an HLA class II-restricted fashion and could potentially provide cognate T cell help and boost antibody titers. We assessed whether the presence of HLA class II molecules abl...
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In Chagas' disease caused by Trypanosoma cruzi, a paradigm of autoimmune disease, both autoantibodies and autoreactive T cells have been described. We have identified a novel dominant autoantigen, named Cha, recognized by the majority of sera from T. cruzi-infected humans and mice. We noted significant homologies between amino acids 120-129 of Cha, where the B-cell epitope maps, and an expresse...
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Journal of autoimmunity
دوره 24 2 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2005