自身免疫
实验性自身免疫性脑脊髓炎
T细胞受体
细胞生物学
抗原
嵌合抗原受体
生物
免疫学
T细胞
免疫系统
作者
Jaeu Yi,Aidan T. Miller,Angela S. Archambault,Andrew Jones,Tara R. Bradstreet,Sravanthi Bandla,Yu-Sung Hsu,Brian T. Edelson,You W. Zhou,Daved H. Fremont,Takeshi Egawa,Nathan Singh,Gregory F. Wu,Chyi‐Song Hsieh
出处
期刊:Science immunology
[American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)]
日期:2022-10-28
卷期号:7 (76)
被引量:20
标识
DOI:10.1126/sciimmunol.abo0777
摘要
Both higher- and lower-affinity self-reactive CD4+ T cells are expanded in autoimmunity; however, their individual contribution to disease remains unclear. We addressed this question using peptide-MHCII chimeric antigen receptor (pMHCII-CAR) T cells to specifically deplete peptide-reactive T cells in mice. Integration of improvements in CAR engineering with TCR repertoire analysis was critical for interrogating in vivo the role of TCR affinity in autoimmunity. Our original MOG35-55 pMHCII-CAR, which targeted only higher-affinity TCRs, could prevent the induction of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). However, pMHCII-CAR enhancements to pMHCII stability, as well as increased survivability via overexpression of a dominant-negative Fas, were required to target lower-affinity MOG-specific T cells and reverse ongoing clinical EAE. Thus, these data suggest a model in which higher-affinity autoreactive T cells are required to provide the "activation energy" for initiating neuroinflammatory injury, but lower-affinity cells are sufficient to maintain ongoing disease.
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