Identification of isoform-specific T-cell epitopes in the major timothy grass pollen allergen, Phl p 5

1999 
Background The involvement of CD4+ T cells in the pathophysiology of atopic disease is well established. Objective To gain further insight into the activation requirements for allergen-specific T cells, we characterized epitope specificity, HLA restriction and T-cell receptor (TCR) usage for T cells specific to Phl p 5, the group 5 major allergen of the grass Phleum pratense. Methods To identify the T-cell epitopes of Phl p 5, three Phl p 5-specific T-cell lines (TCLs) and 15 T-cell clones (TCCs) generated from the peripheral blood of three grass-allergic patients were tested with recombinant truncated Phl p 5a fragments and synthetic Phl p 5b peptides representing these two different recombinant Phl p 5 isoallergens. Additional activation experiments with HLA-subtyped antigen-presenting cells and flow cytometry analysis with TCR V-specific mAb were performed to further characterize the activation requirements for Phl p 5-specific TCCs. Results At least nine distinct T-cell specificities were identified and the T-cell epitopes recognized differed considerably among the three patients. Most of the epitopes found were isoform-specific, whereas three epitopes were shared between Phl p 5a and 5b. Several human leucocyte antigen (HLA) class II molecules were involved in the recognition of Phl p 5. Different HLA restriction specificities were even found among TCCs specific to the same epitope region. All TCCs were TCR-α/β positive, and an overrepresentation of TCR Vβ 3.1+ clones among TCCs specific to Phl p 5 appear to exists as 31% (4/13) of the TCCs expressed TCR Vβ 3.1 (compared with 5% TCR Vβ 3.1+ T cells in human peripheral blood) with no correlation with epitope specificity or HLA restriction. Conclusion The T-cell reactivity of the three grass-allergic patients investigated shows that isoallergen-specific T-cell epitopes are found throughout the peptide backbone of Phl p 5a and Phl p 5b, and dominant T-cell epitopes of Phl p 5 were not identified. This indicates that a mixture of at least full-length rPhl p 5a and rPhl p 5b may be required to target the total Phl p 5-specific T-cell response of atopic patients.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    45
    References
    18
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []