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. 2024 Oct 8;57(10):2399-2415.e8.
doi: 10.1016/j.immuni.2024.07.024. Epub 2024 Aug 29.

CD4+ T cells reactive to a hybrid peptide from insulin-chromogranin A adopt a distinct effector fate and are pathogenic in autoimmune diabetes

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CD4+ T cells reactive to a hybrid peptide from insulin-chromogranin A adopt a distinct effector fate and are pathogenic in autoimmune diabetes

Jason S Mitchell et al. Immunity. .

Abstract

T cell-mediated islet destruction is a hallmark of autoimmune diabetes. Here, we examined the dynamics and pathogenicity of CD4+ T cell responses to four different insulin-derived epitopes during diabetes initiation in non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice. Single-cell RNA sequencing of tetramer-sorted CD4+ T cells from the pancreas revealed that islet-antigen-specific T cells adopted a wide variety of fates and required XCR1+ dendritic cells for their activation. Hybrid-insulin C-chromogranin A (InsC-ChgA)-specific CD4+ T cells skewed toward a distinct T helper type 1 (Th1) effector phenotype, whereas the majority of insulin B chain and hybrid-insulin C-islet amyloid polypeptide-specific CD4+ T cells exhibited a regulatory phenotype and early or weak Th1 phenotype, respectively. InsC-ChgA-specific CD4+ T cells were uniquely pathogenic upon transfer, and an anti-InsC-ChgA:IAg7 antibody prevented spontaneous diabetes. Our findings highlight the heterogeneity of T cell responses to insulin-derived epitopes in diabetes and argue for the feasibility of antigen-specific therapies that blunts the response of pathogenic CD4+ T cells causing autoimmunity.

Keywords: HIP; Th1; autoimmune; diabetes; hybrid-insulin-peptide; mAb; pancreas; ssRNA-seq; tetramer; therapy.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of interests The authors J.A.S. and B.T.F. have a patent related to this work. U.S. Patent No. 15/952,965, title: monoclonal antibodies directed to peptide in the context of MHC and methods of making and using monoclonal antibodies. Office: United States of America.

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