Retro-inverso-D-peptides as a novel targeted immunotherapy for Type 1 diabetes
Abstract:
Over the past four decades, the number of people with Type 1 Diabetes (T1D)
has increased by 4% per year, making it an important public health challenge.
Currently, no curative therapy exists for T1D and the only available treatment
is insulin replacement.
HLA-DQ8 has been shown to present antigenic islet peptides driving the
activation of CD4+ T-cells in T1D patients. Specifically, the insulin peptide
InsB:9-23 activates self-reactive CD4+ T-cells, causing pancreatic beta cell
destruction.
The aim of the current study was to identify retro-inverso-d-amino acid based
peptides (RI-D-peptides) that can suppress T-cell activation by blocking the
presentation of InsB:9-23 peptide within HLA-DQ8 pocket.
We identified a RI-D-peptide (RI-EXT) that inhibited InsB:9-23 binding to
recombinant HLA-DQ8 molecule, as well as its binding to DQ8 expressed on
human B-cells.
RI-EXT prevented T-cell activation in a cellular antigen presentation assay
containing human DQ8 cells loaded with InsB:9-23 peptide and murine T-cells
expressing a human T-cell receptor specific for the InsB:9-23-DQ8 complex.
Moreover, RI-EXT blocked T-cell activation by InsB:9-23 in a humanized DQ8
mice both ex vivo and in vivo, as shown by decreased production of IL-2 and
IFN-γ and reduced lymphocyte proliferation.
Interestingly, RI-EXT also blocked lymphocyte activation and proliferation
by InsB:9-23 in PBMCs isolated from recent onset DQ8-T1D patients.
In summary, we discovered a RI-D-peptide that blocks InsB:9-23 binding to
HLA-DQ8 and its presentation to T-cells in T1D.
These findings set the stage for using our approach as a novel therapy
for patients with T1D and potentially other autoimmune diseases.