Antibody binding to a collagen type‐II epitope gives rise to an inhibitory peptide for autoreactive T cells

H Burkhardt, T Yan, B Bröker… - European journal of …, 1992 - Wiley Online Library
H Burkhardt, T Yan, B Bröker, A Beck‐Sickinger, R Holmdahl, K von der Mark, F Emmrich
European journal of immunology, 1992Wiley Online Library
It is well documented that antigen recognition by T cells requires small peptides which are
generated by protein cleavage in antigen‐presenting cells. These peptides have to
associate with major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules in order to be recognized.
An inhibitory peptide may bind to the same site of the MHC‐encoded protein but is not
recognized by the T cell. Here we describe a stimulatory and an inhibitory peptide sequence
within human collagen type II (CII) as defined by means of the same autoreactive human T …
Abstract
It is well documented that antigen recognition by T cells requires small peptides which are generated by protein cleavage in antigen‐presenting cells. These peptides have to associate with major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules in order to be recognized. An inhibitory peptide may bind to the same site of the MHC‐encoded protein but is not recognized by the T cell. Here we describe a stimulatory and an inhibitory peptide sequence within human collagen type II (CII) as defined by means of the same autoreactive human T cell clone. Most interestingly, the inhibitory peptide is not generated by regular processing in peripheral blood mononuclear cells but only in the presence of an antibody that binds to the same domain and thereby seems to protect the inhibitory sequence. This finding may indicate that certain autoantibodies have the potential to block autoreactive T cells with specificity for a distinct epitope on the same antigen.
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