HLA-DM negatively regulates HLA-DR4-restricted collagen pathogenic peptide presentation and T cell recognition

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Abstract

Rheumatoid arthritis, an autoimmune disease, is significantly associated with the HLA class II allele HLA-DR4. While the etiology of rheumatoid arthritis remains unknown, type II collagen (CII) is a candidate autoantigen. An immunodominant pathogenic epitope from this autoantigen, CII261-273, which binds to HLA-DR4 and activates CD4+ T cells, has been identified. The non-classical class II antigen, HLA-DM, is also a key component of class II antigen presentation pathways influencing peptide presentation by HLA-DR molecules expressed on professional antigen-presenting cells (APC). Here, we investigated whether the HLA-DR4-restricted presentation of the pathogenic CII261-273 epitope was regulated by HLA-DM expression in APC. We show that APC lacking HLA-DM efficiently display the CII261-273 peptide/epitope to activate CD4+ T cells, and that presentation of this peptide is modulated dependent on the level of HLA-DM expression in APC. Mechanistic studies demonstrated that the CII261-273 peptide is internalized by APC and edited by HLADM molecules in the recycling pathway, inhibiting peptide presentation and T cell recognition. These findings suggest that HLA-DM expression in APC controls class II-mediated CII261-273 peptide/epitope presentation and regulates CD4+ T cell responses to this self epitope, thus potentially influencing CII-dependent autoimmunity. © 2008 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.

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APA

Amria, S., Hajiaghamohseni, L. M., Harbeson, C., Zhao, D., Goldstein, O., Blum, J. S., & Haque, A. (2008). HLA-DM negatively regulates HLA-DR4-restricted collagen pathogenic peptide presentation and T cell recognition. European Journal of Immunology, 38(7), 1961–1970. https://doi.org/10.1002/eji.200738100

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