A microenvironment-driven HLA-II-associated insulin neoantigen elicits persistent memory T cell activation in diabetes
收藏NIAID Data Ecosystem2026-05-10 收录
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https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE309696
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The antigenic landscape of autoimmune diabetes reflects a failure to preserve self-tolerance. Yet, how novel neoantigens emerge in humans remains incompletely understood. Here, we designed an immunopeptidomics-based approach to probe HLA-II-bound, islet-derived neoepitopes in patients with type 1 diabetes (T1D). We uncovered a Cys→Ser transformation, conserved between mice and humans, that reshapes autoreactivity to insulin at the single-residue level. This transformation, which we call “C19S,” arises from oxidative remodeling of insulin in stressed pancreatic islets and also occur in cytokine-activated antigen-presenting cells, contributing to a feed-forward loop of neoepitope formation and presentation. Despite involving just one amino acid, C19S is recognized by HLA-DQ8-restricted, register-specific CD4+ T cells that expand at diabetes onset. These neoepitope-specific CD4+ T cells lack regulatory potential but acquire a poised central memory phenotype that persists across disease progression. These findings reveal a distinct, microenvironment-driven route of neoantigen formation that fuels sustained autoreactivity in diabetes. The study aims to investigate transcriptional features of CD4 T cells specifically recognizing the InsB12-20(C19S) neoepitope. Two tetramer-binding CD4+ T cell populations (C19S and native), as well as tetramer-negative controls, were FACS-sorted from pooled spleens and lymph nodes of 8-week-old female NOD mice. The cells were sumitted for 10x scRNA-seq and TCR vdj library preparation and analyzed for single-cell gene expression and TCR sequencing. The experiments were performed in replicates.
创建时间:
2025-09-30



