Abstract

The PTPN22R620W single nucleotide polymorphism increases the risk of developing multiple autoimmune diseases including type 1 diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis and lupus. PTPN22 is highly expressed in antigen presenting cells (APCs) where the expression of the murine disease associated variant orthologue (Ptpn22R619W) is reported to dysregulate pattern recognition receptor signalling in dendritic cells (DCs) and promote T-cell proliferation. Because T-cell activation is dependent on DC antigen uptake, degradation and presentation, we analysed the efficiency of these functions in splenic and GM-CSF bone marrow derived DC from wild type (WT), Ptpn22-/- or Ptpn22R619W mutant mice. Results indicated no differential ability of DCs to uptake antigen via macropinocytosis or receptor-mediated endocytosis. Antigen degradation and presentation was also equal as was WT T-cell conjugate formation and subsequent T-cell proliferation. Despite the likely presence of multiple phosphatase-regulated pathways in the antigen uptake, processing and presentation pathways that we investigated, we observed that Ptpn22 and the R619W autoimmune associated variant were dispensable. These important findings indicate that under non-inflammatory conditions there is no requirement for Ptpn22 in DC dependent antigen uptake and T-cell activation. Our findings reveal that perturbations in antigen uptake and processing, a fundamental pathway determining adaptive immune responses, are unlikely to provide a mechanism for the risk associated with the Ptpn22 autoimmune associated polymorphism.

Highlights

  • The C1858T polymorphism within the protein tyrosine phosphatase PTPN22 is a major risk factor for the development of multiple autoimmune diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis (RA), type I diabetes, lupus and juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) [1]

  • Macropinocytosis was assessed by the capability of wild type (WT) and Ptpn22-/- Bone marrow derived dendritic cell (BMDC) to take up Lucifer yellow (LY)

  • The LY geometric mean fluorescent intensity (GMFI) signal increased over time (Fig 1A), and internalisation of LY by WT, Ptpn22R619W, and Ptpn22-/- BMDC was comparable (Fig 1A–1C)

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Summary

Introduction

The C1858T polymorphism within the protein tyrosine phosphatase PTPN22 (encoding PTPN22R620W) is a major risk factor for the development of multiple autoimmune diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis (RA), type I diabetes, lupus and juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) [1]. It has become widely accepted that the autoimmune associated PTPN22R620W variant displays reduced binding to the tyrosine kinase Csk, due to a missense mutation in the P1 domain [2,10], but precisely how the PTPN22-R620W variant affects the functions of immune cell subsets is more complex. Both gain- and loss-of-phosphatase function effects have been reported, depending on the cellular context and signalling pathway under investigation [4,5,9,10,11]

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