1. Single insulin-specific CD8+ T cells show characteristic gene expression profiles in human type 1 diabetes.
- Author
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Luce S, Lemonnier F, Briand JP, Coste J, Lahlou N, Muller S, Larger E, Rocha B, Mallone R, and Boitard C
- Subjects
- Adult, Cells, Cultured, Female, Gene Expression Profiling, Humans, Insulin genetics, Male, Middle Aged, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes metabolism, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 immunology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 metabolism, Insulin metabolism
- Abstract
Objective: Both the early steps and the high recurrence of autoimmunity once the disease is established are unexplained in human type 1 diabetes. Because CD8(+) T cells are central and insulin is a key autoantigen in the disease process, our objective was to characterize HLA class I-restricted autoreactive CD8(+) T cells specific for preproinsulin (PPI) in recent-onset and long-standing type 1 diabetic patients and healthy control subjects., Research Design and Methods: We used HLA-A*02:01 tetramers complexed to PPI peptides to enumerate circulating PPI-specific CD8(+) T cells in patients and characterize them using membrane markers and single-cell PCR., Results: Most autoreactive CD8(+) T cells detected in recent-onset type 1 diabetic patients are specific for leader sequence peptides, notably PPI(6-14), whereas CD8(+) T cells in long-standing patients recognize the B-chain peptide PPI(33-42) (B(9-18)). Both CD8(+) T-cell specificities are predominantly naïve, central, and effector memory cells, and their gene expression profile differs from cytomegalovirus-specific CD8(+) T cells. PPI(6-14)-specific CD8(+) T cells detected in one healthy control displayed Il-10 mRNA expression, which was not observed in diabetic patients., Conclusions: PPI-specific CD8(+) T cells in type 1 diabetic patients include central memory and target different epitopes in new-onset versus long-standing disease. Our data support the hypothesis that insulin therapy may contribute to the expansion of autoreactive CD8(+) T cells in the long term.
- Published
- 2011
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