TY - JOUR KW - Alleles KW - Amino Acid Sequence KW - Animals KW - Arthritis, Rheumatoid KW - Autoantigens KW - Autoimmune Diseases KW - B-Lymphocytes KW - CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes KW - Chagas disease KW - Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 KW - Histocompatibility Antigens KW - Humans KW - Immunodominant Epitopes KW - leprosy KW - Liver Cirrhosis, Biliary KW - Major Histocompatibility Complex KW - Models, Biological KW - Molecular Mimicry KW - Molecular Sequence Data KW - Uveitis AU - Baum H AU - Staines N A AB -

The receptor repertoire of peripheral CD4+ cells is primarily determined by selection processes in the thymus. These result in the positive selection of T cells whose receptors weakly recognize self-peptides restricted by class II self-MHC heterodimers. A majority of such self-peptide partial agonists are likely to be derived from self-MHC molecules. It is suggested that these thymically selected, weakly autoreactive T cells may subsequently be stimulated by peripheral exposure to microbially derived agonists that 'mimic' corresponding self-MHC peptides. In turn, 'molecular mimicry' between microbial agonists and tissue-specific self-peptides may lead to T-cell-mediated autoimmune disease. Hence such disease may reflect 'three-way mimicry' between peptides of respectively target tissue, pathogen and self-MHC (or other self-peptide dominantly presented in the thymus). This hypothesis accounts for the role of MHC haplotype in determining susceptibility to (or protection from) autoimmune disease. Direct evidence is presented in favour of the model as applied to diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, autoimmune uveitus and autoimmune diabetes. Strong circumstantial evidence, based primarily on sequence similarities, is also presented for other autoimmune diseases. However, it is noted that the statistics of database searches, and the lack of predictable correlation between sequence similarity and T-cell cross-reactivity, require that such evidence be substantiated by further direct experiment.

BT - Cytokines, cellular & molecular therapy C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9287250?dopt=Abstract DA - 1997 Jun IS - 2 J2 - Cytokines Cell. Mol. Ther. LA - eng N2 -

The receptor repertoire of peripheral CD4+ cells is primarily determined by selection processes in the thymus. These result in the positive selection of T cells whose receptors weakly recognize self-peptides restricted by class II self-MHC heterodimers. A majority of such self-peptide partial agonists are likely to be derived from self-MHC molecules. It is suggested that these thymically selected, weakly autoreactive T cells may subsequently be stimulated by peripheral exposure to microbially derived agonists that 'mimic' corresponding self-MHC peptides. In turn, 'molecular mimicry' between microbial agonists and tissue-specific self-peptides may lead to T-cell-mediated autoimmune disease. Hence such disease may reflect 'three-way mimicry' between peptides of respectively target tissue, pathogen and self-MHC (or other self-peptide dominantly presented in the thymus). This hypothesis accounts for the role of MHC haplotype in determining susceptibility to (or protection from) autoimmune disease. Direct evidence is presented in favour of the model as applied to diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, autoimmune uveitus and autoimmune diabetes. Strong circumstantial evidence, based primarily on sequence similarities, is also presented for other autoimmune diseases. However, it is noted that the statistics of database searches, and the lack of predictable correlation between sequence similarity and T-cell cross-reactivity, require that such evidence be substantiated by further direct experiment.

PY - 1997 SP - 115 EP - 25 T2 - Cytokines, cellular & molecular therapy TI - MHC-derived peptides and the CD4+ T-cell repertoire: implications for autoimmune disease. VL - 3 SN - 1368-4736 ER -