SUMMARYWe used a GAD65-specific human B-T cell line cognate system in vitro to investigate the modulation of GAD65 presentation by autoantibody, assessed in a proliferation assay. Generally, if the T cell determinant overlaps or resides within the antibody epitope, effects of presentation are blunted while if they are distant can lead to potent presentation. For three different autoreactive B-T cell line cognate pairs, the modulation of GAD65 presentation followed the mode of overlapping or distant epitopes with resultant potent or undetectable presentation. However, other cognate pairs elicited variability in this pattern of presentation. Notably, one B cell line, DPC, whose antibody epitope did not overlap with the T cell determinants, was consistently poor in presenting GAD65. Using the fluorescent dye Alexa Fluor 647 conjugated to GAD65 to study receptor-mediated antigen endocytosis showed that all the antigenspecific B cell clones were efficient in intracellular accumulation of the antigen. Additionally, multicolour immunofluorescence microscopy showed that the internalized GAD65/surface IgG complexes were rapidly targeted to a perinuclear compartment in all GAD-specific B cell clones. This analysis also demonstrated that HLA-DM expression was reduced strongly in DPC compared to the stimulatory B cell clones. Thus the capability of antigen-specific B cells to capture and present antigen to human T cell lines is dependent on the spatial relationship of B and T cell epitopes as well other factors which contribute to the efficiency of presentation.
Although the patterns of lymphokine (LK) secretion by CD4 and CD8 alpha beta T cells have been extensively studied, the question of whether gamma delta T cells display patterns of restricted LK production and whether these patterns are the same as seen in conventional alpha beta T cells has not been previously addressed. In this study we generated panels of gamma delta T cell clones from normal C57BL/6 and BALB/c mice using a lectin-driven system and compared their patterns of secretion of nine LK with those of CD4 and CD8 alpha beta T cell clones generated in the same system. The results showed that gamma delta T cell clones displayed nonrandom patterns of highly restricted LK production with a strong bias towards the production of type 1 LK. The dominant pattern was one of high level secretion of interferon-gamma and tumor necrosis factor (TNF), with variable production of interleukin (IL)-2, and little or none of the type 2 LK IL-4, IL-5, IL-6, and IL-10. This pattern differed significantly from that of CD4 Th1 clones in that gamma delta clones showed a striking deficiency in the production of IL-3 and granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor. A small subset of gamma delta clones displayed a novel pattern, in which the only LK produced in substantial quantity were TNF and variable amounts of IL-2. The bias of gamma delta T cells towards type 1 LK production was not an artefact associated with cloning because bulk populations of splenic gamma delta T cells behaved in the same way, even when activated in the presence of high concentrations of IL-4.
The neutralizing activity and fusion-inhibition activity per unit weight of immunoglobulin were determined for each of a panel of 20 monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) to the fusion (F) protein of respiratory syncytial (RS) virus. Neutralization did not correlate with fusion-inhibiting activity, suggesting that the F protein plays at least two independent, antibody-sensitive roles in viral infection. Antibodies with the highest biological activity against A2, a subgroup A strain of RS virus, neutralized a subgroup B strain (8/60) poorly, suggesting a degree of antigenic variation that may be important in human infection.All but one fusion-inhibiting MAb bound to protein blots and binding was mapped to two areas on overlapping F protein fragments. One MAb with relatively poor fusion-inhibiting activity bound only to fragments C-terminal of amino acid 384, the remainder bound only to fragments containing residues 253 to 289. MAbs directed to the latter site were heterogeneous in neutralizing activity, subgroup specificity and fusioninhibiting activity. These variations between MAbs could not be accounted for by differences in their binding avidities. We suggest that this binding site is not the complete antibody epitope which probably includes conformation-dependent elements.
Aims/hypothesis. Glutamic acid decarboxylase 65 is a major autoantigen in Type I (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus, autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome and stiff-man syndrome. These disorders are characterised by the presence of multiple autoantibodies to the autoantigen which can be distinguished in a variety of different ways. We have investigated the role of single amino-acid mutations in glutamic acid decarboxylase 65 in distinguishing the binding of serum antibodies and a variety of patient-derived human IgG monoclonal antibodies directed to different determinants of the autoantigen. Methods. We identified a mutant of glutamic acid decarboxylase 65 that contained four single amino-acid mutations from the wild-type molecule. The role of these mutations was investigated by site-directed mutagenesis. We investigated the binding of patientderived serum antibodies to glutamic acid decarboxylase 65 to a number of single and double amino-acid mutants using immunoprecipitation with labelled, recombinant antigen. To overcome the heterogeneity of different anti-glutamic acid decarboxylase 65 antibodies present in a patient's serum, the binding of a panel of eleven patient-derived human monoclonal antibodies recognising different determinants on the autoantigen was also studied.
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