Abstract

IntroductionOrgan‐specific autoimmune diseases are believed to result from immune responses generated against self‐antigens specific to each organ. However, when such responses target antigens expressed promiscuously in multiple tissues, then the immune‐mediated damage may be wide spread.MethodsIn this report, we describe a mitochondrial protein, branched chain α‐ketoacid dehydrogenase kinase (BCKDk) that can act as a target autoantigen in the development of autoimmune inflammatory reactions in both heart and liver.ResultsWe demonstrate that BCKDk protein contains at least nine immunodominant epitopes, three of which, BCKDk 71–90, BCKDk 111–130 and BCKDk 141–160, were found to induce varying degrees of myocarditis in immunized mice. One of these, BCKDk 111–130, could also induce hepatitis without affecting lungs, kidneys, skeletal muscles, and brain. In immunogenicity testing, all three peptides induced antigen‐specific T cell responses, as verified by proliferation assay and/or major histocompatibility complex class II/IAk dextramer staining. Finally, the disease‐inducing abilities of BCKDk peptides were correlated with the production of interferon‐γ, and the activated T cells could transfer disease to naive recipients.ConclusionsThe disease induced by BCKDk peptides could serve as a useful model to study the autoimmune events of inflammatory heart and liver diseases.

Highlights

  • Organ-specific autoimmune diseases are believed to result from immune responses generated against self-antigens specific to each organ

  • We demonstrate that branched chain a-ketoacid dehydrogenase kinase (BCKDk), a mitochondrial protein, contains multiple epitopes that induce varying degrees of inflammatory reactions in heart and/ or liver in A/J mice

  • Since most immunized animals showed mild multifocal lesions, the inflammatory damage induced by BCKDk peptides might not be severe enough to cause necrotic changes as seen with other experimental autoimmune myocarditis (EAM) models like cardiac myosin [19, 21] and cardiac troponin-I (cTnI) [7, 26, 27]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Organ-specific autoimmune diseases are believed to result from immune responses generated against self-antigens specific to each organ. When such responses target antigens expressed promiscuously in multiple tissues, the immune-mediated damage may be wide spread. Methods: In this report, we describe a mitochondrial protein, branched chain a-ketoacid dehydrogenase kinase (BCKDk) that can act as a target autoantigen in the development of autoimmune inflammatory reactions in both heart and liver. We demonstrated that the mitochondrial inner membrane protein, adenine nucleotide translocator (ANT1) can be a target autoantigen in the pathogenesis of DCM by identifying ANT1 21–40 as the disease-inducing epitope in A/J mice [2]. We describe the potential relevance of the mitochondrial matrix branched chain a-ketoacid dehydrogenase (BCKD) complex proteins to myocarditis and hepatitis.

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call