In vitro priming of human lymphocytes to heterologous insulins.
1989
Abstract We have developed an in vitro priming assay in which peripheral blood lymphocytes from normal subjects are primed with insulin for 14 days prior to challenge with insulin in conjunction with autologous antigen-presenting cells for a further 5 days. Sheep, beef and pork insulins possess, respectively, four, three and one amino acid differences from the human molecule (out of a total of 51 residues) and the magnitude of the response to priming correlates with the degree of sequence variation. Although human insulin produces little response, priming with heterologous insulins readily induces auto-immunization on secondary challenge. The response to porcine priming was enhanced if the secondary cultures were challenged with bovine or ovine insulin, i.e., a heteroclitic response was observed. Individual donors differ in their response to priming and high responders possess the HLA-DR7 glycoprotein more frequently than low responders. This is in keeping with previous studies on antibody production in vivo and probably relates to the case with which individual class II glycoproteins complex with processed antigen and stimulate T cells. This method has considerable potential for screening novel insulin molecules and formulations and should facilitate the mapping of helper and suppressor epitopes as well as the identification of agretopes involved in the presentation of insulin to T cells.
Keywords:
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
23
References
3
Citations
NaN
KQI