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Mimicry in recognition of cardiac myosin peptides by heart-intralesional T cell clones from rheumatic heart disease.
Faé, Kellen C; da Silva, Danielle Diefenbach; Oshiro, Sandra E; Tanaka, Ana C; Pomerantzeff, Pablo M A; Douay, Corinne; Charron, Dominique; Toubert, Antoine; Cunningham, Madeleine W; Kalil, Jorge; Guilherme, Luiza.
Affiliation
  • Faé KC; Heart Institute (Instituto do Coração) University of São Paulo, School of Medicine, Avenida Dr. Eneas de Carvalho Aguiar, 44-9o andar, 05403-000 São Paulo, Brazil.
J Immunol ; 176(9): 5662-70, 2006 May 01.
Article de En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16622036
ABSTRACT
Molecular mimicry between Streptococcus pyogenes Ags and human proteins has been considered as a mechanism leading to autoimmune reactions in rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease (RHD). Cardiac myosin has been shown as a putative autoantigen recognized by autoantibodies of rheumatic fever patients. We assessed the human heart-intralesional T cell response against human light meromyosin (LMM) and streptococcal M5 peptides and mitral-valve-derived proteins by proliferation assay. Cytokines induced by LMM peptides were also evaluated. The frequency of intralesional T cell clones that recognized LMM peptides was 63.2%. Thirty-four percent of T cell clones presented cross-reactivity with different patterns 1) myosin and valve-derived proteins; 2) myosin and streptococcal M5 peptides; and 3) myosin, valve-derived proteins and M5 peptides. In addition, several LMM peptides were recognized simultaneously showing a multiple reactivity pattern of heart-infiltrating T cells. Inflammatory cytokines (IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha) were predominantly produced by heart-infiltrating T cells upon stimulation with LMM peptides. The alignment of LMM and streptococcal M5 peptides showed frequent homology among conserved amino acid substitutions. This is the first study showing the cellular response by human heart-infiltrating T cells against cardiac myosin epitopes in RHD patients. The high percentage of reactivity against cardiac myosin strengthens its role as one of the major autoantigens involved in rheumatic heart lesions. T cell reactivity toward myosin epitopes in RHD patients may also trigger the broad recognition of valvular proteins with structural or functional similarities.
Sujet(s)
Recherche sur Google
Collection: 01-internacional Base de données: MEDLINE Sujet principal: Fragments peptidiques / Rhumatisme cardiaque / Protéines bactériennes / Lymphocytes T / Mimétisme moléculaire / Myosines cardiaques Limites: Humans Langue: En Journal: J Immunol Année: 2006 Type de document: Article Pays d'affiliation: Brésil
Recherche sur Google
Collection: 01-internacional Base de données: MEDLINE Sujet principal: Fragments peptidiques / Rhumatisme cardiaque / Protéines bactériennes / Lymphocytes T / Mimétisme moléculaire / Myosines cardiaques Limites: Humans Langue: En Journal: J Immunol Année: 2006 Type de document: Article Pays d'affiliation: Brésil
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