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Publication : The MHC-II peptidome of pancreatic islets identifies key features of autoimmune peptides.

First Author  Wan X Year  2020
Journal  Nat Immunol Volume  21
Issue  4 Pages  455-463
PubMed ID  32152506 Mgi Jnum  J:306901
Mgi Id  MGI:6706724 Doi  10.1038/s41590-020-0623-7
Citation  Wan X, et al. (2020) The MHC-II peptidome of pancreatic islets identifies key features of autoimmune peptides. Nat Immunol 21(4):455-463
abstractText  The nature of autoantigens that trigger autoimmune diseases has been much discussed, but direct biochemical identification is lacking for most. Addressing this question demands unbiased examination of the self-peptides displayed by a defined autoimmune major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC-II) molecule. Here, we examined the immunopeptidome of the pancreatic islets in non-obese diabetic mice, which spontaneously develop autoimmune diabetes based on the I-A(g7) variant of MHC-II. The relevant peptides that induced pathogenic CD4(+) T cells at the initiation of diabetes derived from proinsulin. These peptides were also found in the MHC-II peptidome of the pancreatic lymph nodes and spleen. The proinsulin-derived peptides followed a trajectory from their generation and exocytosis in beta cells to uptake and presentation in islets and peripheral sites. Such a pathway generated conventional epitopes but also resulted in the presentation of post-translationally modified peptides, including deamidated sequences. These analyses reveal the key features of a restricted component in the self-MHC-II peptidome that caused autoreactivity.
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