Interleukin-10–mediated regulatory T-cell responses to epitopes on a human red blood cell autoantigen

Author:

Hall Andrew M.1,Ward Frank J.1,Vickers Mark A.1,Stott Lisa-Marie1,Urbaniak Stanislaw J.1,Barker Robert N.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Medicine and Therapeutics, Institute of Medical Sciences, University of Aberdeen Foresterhill, Aberdeen, United Kingdom; and the Academic Transfusion Medicine Unit, Regional Transfusion Centre, Foresterhill, Aberdeen, United Kingdom.

Abstract

Regulatory T cells have been shown to control animal models of immune-mediated pathology by inhibitory cytokine production, but little is known about such cells in human disease. Here we characterize regulatory T-cell responses specific for a human red blood cell autoantigen in patients with warm-type autoimmune hemolytic anemia. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells from patients with autoimmune hemolytic anemia were found either to proliferate and produce interferon-γ or to secrete the regulatory cytokine interleukin 10 when stimulated in vitro with a major red blood cell autoantigen, the RhD protein. Flow cytometric analysis confirmed that the majority of the responding cells were of the CD4+phenotype. Serial results from individual patients demonstrated that this bias toward proliferative or interleukin-10 responses was unstable over time and could reverse in subsequent samples. Epitope mapping studies identified peptides from the sequence of the autoantigen that preferentially induced interleukin-10 production, rather than proliferation, and demonstrated that many contain naturally processed epitopes. Responses to such peptides suppressed T-cell proliferation against the RhD protein, an inhibition that was mediated largely by interleukin 10 and dependent on cytotonic T lymphocyte–associated antigen (CTLA-4) costimulation. Antigenic peptides with the ability to stimulate specific regulatory cells may represent a new class of therapeutic agents for immune-mediated disease.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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