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Peanut-specific T cell responses in patients with different clinical reactivity

Whole extract or allergen-specific IgE testing has become increasingly popular in the diagnosis of peanut allergy. However, much less is known about T cell responses in peanut allergy and how it relates to different clinical phenotypes. CD4+ T cells play a major role in the pathophysiology of peanut...

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Autores principales: Birrueta, Giovanni, Tripple, Victoria, Pham, John, Manohar, Monali, James, Eddie A., Kwok, William W., Nadeau, Kari C., Sette, Alessandro, Peters, Bjoern, Schulten, Véronique
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6179248/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30304054
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0204620
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author Birrueta, Giovanni
Tripple, Victoria
Pham, John
Manohar, Monali
James, Eddie A.
Kwok, William W.
Nadeau, Kari C.
Sette, Alessandro
Peters, Bjoern
Schulten, Véronique
author_facet Birrueta, Giovanni
Tripple, Victoria
Pham, John
Manohar, Monali
James, Eddie A.
Kwok, William W.
Nadeau, Kari C.
Sette, Alessandro
Peters, Bjoern
Schulten, Véronique
author_sort Birrueta, Giovanni
collection PubMed
description Whole extract or allergen-specific IgE testing has become increasingly popular in the diagnosis of peanut allergy. However, much less is known about T cell responses in peanut allergy and how it relates to different clinical phenotypes. CD4+ T cells play a major role in the pathophysiology of peanut allergy as well as tolerance induction during oral desensitization regimens. We set out to characterize and phenotype the T cell responses and their targets in peanut sensitized patients. Using PBMC from peanut-allergic and non-allergic patients, we mapped T cell epitopes for three major peanut allergens, Ara h 1, 2 and 3 (27 from Ara h 1, 4 from Ara h 2 and 43 from Ara h 3) associated with release of IFNγ (representative Th1 cytokine) and IL5 (representative Th2 cytokine). A pool containing 19 immunodominant peptides, selected to account for 60% of the total Ara h 1-3-specific T cell response in allergics, but only 20% in non-allergics, was shown to discriminate T cell responses in peanut-sensitized, symptomatic vs non-symptomatic individuals more effectively than peanut extract. This pool elicited positive T cell responses above a defined threshold in 12/15 sensitized, symptomatic patients, whereas in the sensitized but non-symptomatic cohort only, 4/14 reacted. The reactivity against this peptide pool in symptomatic patients was dominated by IL-10, IL-17 and to a lesser extend IL-5. For four distinct epitopes, HLA class II restrictions were determined, enabling production of tetrameric reagents. Tetramer staining in four donors (2 symptomatic, 2 non-symptomatic) revealed a trend for increased numbers of peanut epitope-specific T cells in symptomatic patients compared to non-symptomatic patients, which was associated with elevated CRTh2 expression whereas cells from non-symptomatic patients exhibited higher levels of Integrin β7 expression. Our results demonstrate differences in T cell response magnitude, epitope specificity and phenotype between symptomatic and non-symptomatic peanut-sensitized patients. In addition to IgE reactivity, analysis of peanut-specific T cells may be useful to improve our understanding of different clinical manifestations in peanut allergy.
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spelling pubmed-61792482018-10-26 Peanut-specific T cell responses in patients with different clinical reactivity Birrueta, Giovanni Tripple, Victoria Pham, John Manohar, Monali James, Eddie A. Kwok, William W. Nadeau, Kari C. Sette, Alessandro Peters, Bjoern Schulten, Véronique PLoS One Research Article Whole extract or allergen-specific IgE testing has become increasingly popular in the diagnosis of peanut allergy. However, much less is known about T cell responses in peanut allergy and how it relates to different clinical phenotypes. CD4+ T cells play a major role in the pathophysiology of peanut allergy as well as tolerance induction during oral desensitization regimens. We set out to characterize and phenotype the T cell responses and their targets in peanut sensitized patients. Using PBMC from peanut-allergic and non-allergic patients, we mapped T cell epitopes for three major peanut allergens, Ara h 1, 2 and 3 (27 from Ara h 1, 4 from Ara h 2 and 43 from Ara h 3) associated with release of IFNγ (representative Th1 cytokine) and IL5 (representative Th2 cytokine). A pool containing 19 immunodominant peptides, selected to account for 60% of the total Ara h 1-3-specific T cell response in allergics, but only 20% in non-allergics, was shown to discriminate T cell responses in peanut-sensitized, symptomatic vs non-symptomatic individuals more effectively than peanut extract. This pool elicited positive T cell responses above a defined threshold in 12/15 sensitized, symptomatic patients, whereas in the sensitized but non-symptomatic cohort only, 4/14 reacted. The reactivity against this peptide pool in symptomatic patients was dominated by IL-10, IL-17 and to a lesser extend IL-5. For four distinct epitopes, HLA class II restrictions were determined, enabling production of tetrameric reagents. Tetramer staining in four donors (2 symptomatic, 2 non-symptomatic) revealed a trend for increased numbers of peanut epitope-specific T cells in symptomatic patients compared to non-symptomatic patients, which was associated with elevated CRTh2 expression whereas cells from non-symptomatic patients exhibited higher levels of Integrin β7 expression. Our results demonstrate differences in T cell response magnitude, epitope specificity and phenotype between symptomatic and non-symptomatic peanut-sensitized patients. In addition to IgE reactivity, analysis of peanut-specific T cells may be useful to improve our understanding of different clinical manifestations in peanut allergy. Public Library of Science 2018-10-10 /pmc/articles/PMC6179248/ /pubmed/30304054 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0204620 Text en © 2018 Birrueta 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Birrueta, Giovanni
Tripple, Victoria
Pham, John
Manohar, Monali
James, Eddie A.
Kwok, William W.
Nadeau, Kari C.
Sette, Alessandro
Peters, Bjoern
Schulten, Véronique
Peanut-specific T cell responses in patients with different clinical reactivity
title Peanut-specific T cell responses in patients with different clinical reactivity
title_full Peanut-specific T cell responses in patients with different clinical reactivity
title_fullStr Peanut-specific T cell responses in patients with different clinical reactivity
title_full_unstemmed Peanut-specific T cell responses in patients with different clinical reactivity
title_short Peanut-specific T cell responses in patients with different clinical reactivity
title_sort peanut-specific t cell responses in patients with different clinical reactivity
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6179248/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30304054
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0204620
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