Healthy Donors Exhibit a CD4 T Cell Repertoire Specific to the Immunogenic Human Hormone H2-Relaxin before Injection

  • Azam A
  • Gallais Y
  • Mallart S
  • et al.
8Citations
Citations of this article
10Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

H2-relaxin (RLN2) is a two-chain peptide hormone structurally related to insulin with a therapeutic potential in multiple indications. However, multiple injections of human RLN2 induced anti-RLN2 Abs in patients, hampering its clinical development. As T cell activation is required to produce Abs, we wondered whether T cells specific for RLN2 might be already present in the human blood before any injection. We therefore quantified the RLN2-specific T cell repertoire using PBMCs collected from healthy donors. CD4 T cells were stimulated in multiple replicates by weekly rounds of stimulation by dendritic cells loaded with RLN2, and their specificity was assessed by IFN-γ ELISPOT. The number of specific T cell lines was used to estimate the frequency of circulating T cells. In vitro T cell response was demonstrated in 18 of the 23 healthy donors, leading to the generation of 70 independent RLN2-specific T cell lines. The mean frequency of RLN2-specific CD4 T cells was similar to that of T cells specific for known immunogenic therapeutic proteins. Using overlapping peptides, we identified multiple T cell epitopes hosted in the N-terminal parts of the α- and β-chains and common to multiple donors, in agreement with their capacity to bind to multiple HLA-DR molecules. Our results provide important clues to the immunogenicity of RLN2 and highlight the weak central immune tolerance induced against this self-hormone.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Azam, A., Gallais, Y., Mallart, S., Illiano, S., Duclos, O., Prades, C., & Maillère, B. (2019). Healthy Donors Exhibit a CD4 T Cell Repertoire Specific to the Immunogenic Human Hormone H2-Relaxin before Injection. The Journal of Immunology, 202(12), 3507–3513. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1800856

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free