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  4. Engineering antigens for in situ erythrocyte binding induces T-cell deletion
 
research article

Engineering antigens for in situ erythrocyte binding induces T-cell deletion

Kontos, Stephan
•
Kourtis, Iraklis C.
•
Dane, Karen Y.
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2013
Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America (PNAS)

Antigens derived from apoptotic cell debris can drive clonal T-cell deletion or anergy, and antigens chemically coupled ex vivo to apoptotic cell surfaces have been shown correspondingly to induce tolerance on infusion. Reasoning that a large number of erythrocytes become apoptotic (eryptotic) and are cleared each day, we engineered two different antigen constructs to target the antigen to erythrocyte cell surfaces after i.v. injection, one using a conjugate with an erythrocyte-binding peptide and another using a fusion with an antibody fragment, both targeting the erythrocyte-specific cell surface marker glycophorin A. Here, we show that erythrocyte-binding antigen is collected much more efficiently than free antigen by splenic and hepatic immune cell populations and hepatocytes, and that it induces antigen-specific deletional responses in CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells. We further validated T-cell deletion driven by erythrocyte-binding antigens using a transgenic islet β cell-reactive CD4(+) T-cell adoptive transfer model of autoimmune type 1 diabetes: Treatment with the peptide antigen fused to an erythrocyte-binding antibody fragment completely prevented diabetes onset induced by the activated, autoreactive CD4(+) T cells. Thus, we report a translatable modular biomolecular approach with which to engineer antigens for targeted binding to erythrocyte cell surfaces to induce antigen-specific CD4(+) and CD8(+) T-cell deletion toward exogenous antigens and autoantigens.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1073/pnas.1216353110
Web of Science ID

WOS:000313630300011

Author(s)
Kontos, Stephan
Kourtis, Iraklis C.
Dane, Karen Y.
Hubbell, Jeffrey A.  
Date Issued

2013

Publisher

Natl Acad Sciences

Published in
Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America (PNAS)
Volume

110

Issue

1

Start page

E60

End page

68

Subjects

autoimmunity

•

immune tolerance

•

BDC2.5

•

TER119

•

immunoengineering

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LMRP  
Available on Infoscience
January 3, 2013
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/87581
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