How persistent infection overcomes peripheral tolerance mechanisms to cause T cell–mediated autoimmune disease
Author(s)
Yin, Rose; Melton, Samuel; Huseby, Eric S; Kardar, Mehran; Chakraborty, Arup K
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T cells help orchestrate immune responses to pathogens, and their aberrant regulation can trigger autoimmunity. Recent studies highlight that a threshold number of T cells (a quorum) must be activated in a tissue to mount a functional immune response. These collective effects allow the T cell repertoire to respond to pathogens while suppressing autoimmunity due to circulating autoreactive T cells. Our computational studies show that increasing numbers of pathogenic peptides targeted by T cells during persistent or severe viral infections increase the probability of activating T cells that are weakly reactive to self-antigens (molecular mimicry). These T cells are easily re-activated by the self-antigens and contribute to exceeding the quorum threshold required to mount autoimmune responses. Rare peptides that activate many T cells are sampled more readily during severe/persistent infections than in acute infections, which amplifies these effects. Experiments in mice to test predictions from these mechanistic insights are suggested.
Date issued
2024-03-06Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemical Engineering; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics; Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of ChemistryJournal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Citation
R. Yin,S. Melton,E.S. Huseby,M. Kardar, & A.K. Chakraborty, How persistent infection overcomes peripheral tolerance mechanisms to cause T cell–mediated autoimmune disease, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 121 (11) e231859912 (2024).
Version: Final published version