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Th2-polarised PrP-specific Transgenic T-cells Confer Partial Protection against Murine Scrapie

Several hurdles must be overcome in order to achieve efficient and safe immunotherapy against conformational neurodegenerative diseases. In prion diseases, the main difficulty is that the prion protein is tolerated as a self protein, which prevents powerful immune responses. Passive antibody therapy...

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Autores principales: Iken, Saci, Bachy, Véronique, Gourdain, Pauline, Lim, Annick, Grégoire, Sylvie, Chaigneau, Thomas, Aucouturier, Pierre, Carnaud, Claude
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3164648/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21909267
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1002216
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author Iken, Saci
Bachy, Véronique
Gourdain, Pauline
Lim, Annick
Grégoire, Sylvie
Chaigneau, Thomas
Aucouturier, Pierre
Carnaud, Claude
author_facet Iken, Saci
Bachy, Véronique
Gourdain, Pauline
Lim, Annick
Grégoire, Sylvie
Chaigneau, Thomas
Aucouturier, Pierre
Carnaud, Claude
author_sort Iken, Saci
collection PubMed
description Several hurdles must be overcome in order to achieve efficient and safe immunotherapy against conformational neurodegenerative diseases. In prion diseases, the main difficulty is that the prion protein is tolerated as a self protein, which prevents powerful immune responses. Passive antibody therapy is effective only during early, asymptomatic disease, well before diagnosis is made. If efficient immunotherapy of prion diseases is to be achieved, it is crucial to understand precisely how immune tolerance against the prion protein can be overcome and which effector pathways may delay disease progression. To this end, we generated a transgenic mouse that expresses the ß-chain of a T cell receptor recognizing a PrP epitope presented by the class II major histocompatibility complex. The fact that the constraint is applied to only one TCR chain allows adaptation of the other chain according to the presence or absence of tolerogenic PrP. We first show that transgene-bearing T cells, pairing with rearranged α-chains conferring anti-PrP specificity, are systematically eliminated during ontogeny in PrP+ mice, suggesting that precursors with good functional avidity are rare in a normal individual. Second, we show that transgene-bearing T cells with anti-PrP specificity are not suppressed when transferred into PrP+ recipients and proliferate more extensively in a prion-infected host. Finally, such T cells provide protection through a cell-mediated pathway involving IL-4 production. These findings support the idea that cell-mediated immunity in neurodegenerative conditions may not be necessarily detrimental and may even contribute, when properly controlled, to the resolution of pathological processes.
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spelling pubmed-31646482011-09-09 Th2-polarised PrP-specific Transgenic T-cells Confer Partial Protection against Murine Scrapie Iken, Saci Bachy, Véronique Gourdain, Pauline Lim, Annick Grégoire, Sylvie Chaigneau, Thomas Aucouturier, Pierre Carnaud, Claude PLoS Pathog Research Article Several hurdles must be overcome in order to achieve efficient and safe immunotherapy against conformational neurodegenerative diseases. In prion diseases, the main difficulty is that the prion protein is tolerated as a self protein, which prevents powerful immune responses. Passive antibody therapy is effective only during early, asymptomatic disease, well before diagnosis is made. If efficient immunotherapy of prion diseases is to be achieved, it is crucial to understand precisely how immune tolerance against the prion protein can be overcome and which effector pathways may delay disease progression. To this end, we generated a transgenic mouse that expresses the ß-chain of a T cell receptor recognizing a PrP epitope presented by the class II major histocompatibility complex. The fact that the constraint is applied to only one TCR chain allows adaptation of the other chain according to the presence or absence of tolerogenic PrP. We first show that transgene-bearing T cells, pairing with rearranged α-chains conferring anti-PrP specificity, are systematically eliminated during ontogeny in PrP+ mice, suggesting that precursors with good functional avidity are rare in a normal individual. Second, we show that transgene-bearing T cells with anti-PrP specificity are not suppressed when transferred into PrP+ recipients and proliferate more extensively in a prion-infected host. Finally, such T cells provide protection through a cell-mediated pathway involving IL-4 production. These findings support the idea that cell-mediated immunity in neurodegenerative conditions may not be necessarily detrimental and may even contribute, when properly controlled, to the resolution of pathological processes. Public Library of Science 2011-09-01 /pmc/articles/PMC3164648/ /pubmed/21909267 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1002216 Text en Iken et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Iken, Saci
Bachy, Véronique
Gourdain, Pauline
Lim, Annick
Grégoire, Sylvie
Chaigneau, Thomas
Aucouturier, Pierre
Carnaud, Claude
Th2-polarised PrP-specific Transgenic T-cells Confer Partial Protection against Murine Scrapie
title Th2-polarised PrP-specific Transgenic T-cells Confer Partial Protection against Murine Scrapie
title_full Th2-polarised PrP-specific Transgenic T-cells Confer Partial Protection against Murine Scrapie
title_fullStr Th2-polarised PrP-specific Transgenic T-cells Confer Partial Protection against Murine Scrapie
title_full_unstemmed Th2-polarised PrP-specific Transgenic T-cells Confer Partial Protection against Murine Scrapie
title_short Th2-polarised PrP-specific Transgenic T-cells Confer Partial Protection against Murine Scrapie
title_sort th2-polarised prp-specific transgenic t-cells confer partial protection against murine scrapie
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3164648/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21909267
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1002216
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