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Key Words: T lymphocyte Fel d 1 allergen allergy human histocompatibility leukocyte antigen
Abbreviations used: AUC, area under curve; BAL, bronchoalveolar lavage; FEV1, forced volume in 1 s; LAR, late asthmatic reaction; LPR, late-phase reaction; PPD, purified protein derivative.
Allergen challenge of sensitized atopic individuals results in an early response, which in the skin is seen as the immediate wheal and flare reaction, and, after inhalation, as a decrease in airway caliber occurring within minutes (1). These acute reactions are generally considered to be due to the release of histamine and other pharmacological agents from mast cells subsequent to IgE cross-linking. 3–8 h after allergen challenge, there follows a late-phase reaction (LPR)1 characterized in the skin by swelling and induration (1) and in the lung by the late asthmatic reaction (LAR). LPRs are accompanied by inflammatory cell infiltration, in particular eosinophils and Th2 cells (2, 3), and have been used as models of chronic allergic inflammation. There is continued debate as to the relative contributions of IgE-dependent versus T cell–dependent mechanisms in the pathogenesis of the LPR. On the one hand, a cutaneous LPR could be transferred by IgE or injection of anti-IgE (4, 5), whereas we and others have provided extensive evidence that CD4+ T cells are associated with the LPR and chronic asthma (3, 6–8). Furthermore, in animal models, airway eosinophil responses and bronchial hyperresponsiveness to inhaled antigen challenge could be adoptively transferred by CD4+ T cells alone (9, 10).
To provide evidence that the LPR can be provoked by T cell activation independently of the early IgE response, we have administered peptide epitopes derived from the major cat allergen, Fel d 1, to cat-allergic asthmatics. The peptides were capable of inducing T cell proliferation but did not cross-link IgE, as shown by the basophil histamine release assay. We hypothesized that the peptides would elicit isolated late cutaneous reactions after intradermal injection, without a preceding wheal and flare reaction. Unexpectedly, we observed that intradermal injection of the T cell peptide epitopes produced isolated LARs with no visible cutaneous response. These reactions were only observed in a minority of the subjects challenged. In this report, we describe these isolated LARs provoked by T cell peptide epitopes and provide evidence that they are HLA restricted. We also present preliminary observations on hyporesponsiveness ("tolerance") after subsequent rechallenge with the peptides.
Study Design.
Statistical Analysis of LARs.
Peptide Synthesis.
Histamine Release Assays.
Transfected Fibroblast Cell Lines.
Allergen-specific T Lymphocyte Lines.
Primary PBMC Proliferation Assays.
T Cell Line Proliferation Assays in the Presence of Transfected Fibroblast Lines.
ELISA for Cytokines.
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Materials and Methods
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Abstract
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Human Subjects.
40 cat-allergic asthmatic patients were recruited from the Allergy Clinic, Royal Brompton Hospital, London and by advertisement. The study was approved by the Royal Brompton Hospital Ethics Committee, and informed consent was obtained from all patients. Subjects were nonsmokers and had no other significant illness. Inhaled corticosteroids were discontinued at least 2 d before assessment, and oral corticosteroids were discontinued 3 mo before assessment. Patients were specifically instructed not to take antihistamines, corticosteroids, or any other medication for the duration of the study. Volunteers had a history of wheezing on exposure to cats and demonstrated airway hyperresponsiveness, with a provocative concentration (PC)20 of <4 mg/ml methacholine, and >20% reversibility with inhaled β2 agonists. Cat allergy was confirmed by a positive radio allergo sorbent test (>0.35 IU/ml; Pharmacia) and skin prick test to whole cat dander (ALK) and a late phase skin reaction of >3 cm diameter at 6 h, after the intradermal testing of 30 biological units of whole cat dander (containing 4.5 ng Fel d 1) in 0.03 ml. The vehicle for whole cat dander extract contained 0.3 mg/ml human serum albumin and 4 mg/ml phenol (ALK diluent; ALK).
On the first visit (control day), subjects were skin tested with intradermal cat dander. Peripheral blood (150 ml) was taken for HLA typing, histamine release assays, and proliferation assays. Local reactions were observed after 5, 15, and 30 min and hourly for 6 h thereafter. At these times, FEV1 and peak expiratory flow rate were also recorded. On the second visit, patients received 40 µg intradermally of the three peptides comprising FC1P, contained in 25 µl, into each forearm. Local reactions were observed at the same time points as the control day. A positive reaction was defined as a fall in forced volume in 1 s (FEV1) of 20% or more. The time interval between the two study days ranged from 4 to 56 d (average, 17 d). Six of the nine subjects who developed LARs after peptide injections had a further visit in which 0.03 ml of diluent (vehicle) was injected intradermally. Three subjects, having developed LAR after FC1P administration, were recalled for a repeat administration of the peptides 2–6 wk after the initial challenge. An additional three subjects received a repeat administration of FC1P a minimum of 12 mo after the first injection.
FEV1 data was summarized over time for each subject for the control and peptide days. Areas under each curve were calculated using the trapezoidal rule to generate area under curve (AUC). Differences in the AUC between the control day and the peptide day were analyzed by paired t test.
The three FC1Ps for injection were synthesized by F-moc chemistry and supplied as acetate salts. They were purified to >95% by HPLC, subjected to sequence and mass analysis, and subjected to independent analysis for sterility and the absence of endotoxin. Peptides were reconstituted in ALK diluent at 1.6 mg/ml. Peptides for in vitro analysis were synthesized using F-moc chemistry at the Advanced Biotechnology Centre, Imperial College School of Medicine, Charing Cross Campus. Peptide sequences used in this study were: FC1P1, LFLTGTPDEYVEQVAQY; FC1P2, EQVAQYKALPVVLENA; and FC1P3, KALPVVLENARILKNCV. Cat allergen extract was a gift of ALK Abello, Copenhagen, Denmark.
In 11 subjects, PBMCs isolated by density centrifugation from 50 ml of blood were washed three times with Ca2+- and Mg2+-free HBSS. 100-µl aliquots of cell suspension at 5 x 106 cells/ml were combined with an equal volume of peptide (0.02–100 µg/ml) or cat dander (0.02–200 µg/ml). Samples were incubated at 37°C for 60 min, followed by centrifugation. Supernatants were transferred to glass microfiber–coated microtiter plate wells (REFLAB), together with 50 µl of a histamine standard solution (50 ng/ml). Plates were incubated at 37°C for 60 min, washed twice (45 s) in distilled water, and air dried before measurement of histamine by spectrofluorimetry. Percentage of histamine release for each control and test substance was calculated from the mean histamine release (ng/ml) values using the equation: % release = [(sample – spontaneous)/(total – spontaneous)] x 100.
Murine and human fibroblast cell lines transfected with HLA-DR molecules were obtained as gifts from a number of sources: DRB1*0101, 0401, 0403, 0404, and 0406 from Prof. R.I. Lechler and Dr. G. Lombardi (Imperial College School of Medicine [ICSM], Hammersmith Campus, London), DRB1*0402 and 0405 from Prof. J.R. Lamb (University of Edinburgh, UK) and Dr. A. Verhoef (ICSM at National Heart and Lung Institute [NHLI], London), and DRB1*1301, 1302, 1303, 1304, and 1305 from Drs. J.R. Richert and C. Katovich Hurley (Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, DC). Cells were cultured in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum, 2 mM L-glutamine, 100 U/ml penicillin, 100 µg/ml streptomycin, and 250 µg/ml G418 (all from GIBCO BRL).
PBMCs were isolated by density gradient centrifugation from all subjects at the initial screening visit. PBMCs were either frozen for subsequent use as APCs or cultured for 10 d in the presence of cat allergen extract (100 µg/ml; ALK) with addition of purified human IL-2 (Lymphocult LF; Biotest) at a final concentration of 10% on day 6 of culture. Viable cells were harvested and restimulated weekly with cat allergen extract and IL-2, with a further addition of IL-2 on day 3 of the restimulation cycle. Before assay, cells were rested overnight in culture medium in the absence of exogenous antigen or IL-2.
PBMCs were separated from 100 ml whole blood in 25 patients by density centrifugation. PBMCs were washed and resuspended in RPMI supplemented with 5% vol/vol AB-serum (Sigma Chemical Co.), 2 mM L-glutamine, 100 U/ml penicillin, and 100 µg/ml streptomycin and cultured at 105 cells/well in 96-well plates. 16 replicate wells for each of three concentrations were established for each peptide. Purified protein derivative (PPD; 10 µg/ml) was used as positive control. Cells were cultured for 6 d before addition of 1 µCi (37 kBq) tritiated methyl-thymidine per well for 8 h. Cells were harvested, and thymidine incorporation was determined by liquid scintillation spectroscopy. Individual data points for 16 peptide culture wells were compared with those containing medium alone. Statistical evaluation was performed using Mann-Whitney analysis. Results are expressed as delta counts per minute (observed cpm – medium-alone cpm).
Transfected fibroblast lines were cultured overnight in the presence of the relevant peptide at a concentration of 100 µg/ml before harvesting and incubation with mitomycin C (50 µg/ml) for 1 h. Cells were washed extensively before seeding in 96-well, flat-bottomed plates at 3 x 104 cells/well. Allergen-specific T lymphocytes were added (104 cells/well) and cultured for 48 h. Culture supernatants were harvested for cytokine analysis before pulsing wells with 37 kBq/well of tritiated methyl-thymidine and cultured for a further 8 h. Proliferation as correlated with thymidine incorporation was measured by scintillation spectroscopy (TopCount; Canberra Packard).
IL-5 was measured in the laboratory of Dr. D. Huston (Baylor Medical Center, Houston, TX) according to a previously described technique (11). The sensitivity of the assay was 3 pg/ml.
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Results
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Abstract
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Incubation of FC1P with Basophil-enriched PBMCs Did Not Induce Histamine Release.
In contrast to whole cat extract (ALK cat), pooled FC1Ps did not release histamine from basophil-enriched mononuclear cells in vitro. Cells from 11 subjects (5 FC1P reactors and 6 nonreactors) were incubated with FC1Ps at five increasing concentrations up to 100 µg/ml (
5 x 10–5 M of each of the pooled peptides). Whole cat dander extract served as a positive control, releasing histamine in all subjects assayed (Fig. 1). No immediate skin or asthmatic reactions were observed in vivo, further demonstrating that FC1P did not bind IgE.
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aspartic acid), was able to present FC1P2, inducing proliferation in T cells from a DRB1*0408 donor.
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There is strong circumstantial evidence to support a role for T lymphocytes in the pathogenesis of asthma (12). This includes elevated numbers of activated T cells in the blood of patients with acute severe asthma (8), as well as studies using bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) and bronchial biopsies from mild asthmatics in which increases in CD3/CD4+ cells expressing mRNA positive for IL-4 and IL-5 cells were demonstrated (3, 7, 13). In a provoked model of asthma, increased numbers of CD4+ cells in BAL after allergen challenge were also observed (14). Furthermore, the allergen-induced late-phase, but not the early-phase, reaction was inhibited by prior administration of cyclosporin A, a compound with major inhibitory effects on CD4+ cells (15). More recently, a single infusion of humanized anti-CD4 mAbs into patients with chronic asthma was associated with significant improvements in lung function (16). In Brown Norway rats, Watanabe et al. showed increases in airway resistance up to 8 h after adoptive transfer of CD4 but not CD8 T cells and subsequent allergen challenge (9). Adoptive transfer experiments in mice have also demonstrated that baseline airway hyperresponsiveness was T cell dependent (10).
In animal models, initial administration of peptides in sensitized mice can induce activation of primed T cells (17). However, subsequent administration leads to the induction of tolerance, not only to the peptide but to the whole allergen (18). Using cat-sensitive asthmatics, Norman et al. (19) attempted to induce the counterpart of murine experimental T cell tolerance in human atopic allergic individuals by subcutaneous injection of two peptides (termed IPC1 and IPC2) spanning a large proportion of chain 1 of Fel d 1. Although there was some subjective symptomatic improvement, many patients reported "allergic" symptoms that occurred between 10 min and 6 h after subcutaneous injections. Other groups, using the same peptides, reported similar results (20, 21). As IPC1 and IPC2 are 27 residues long (22), it is possible that the immediate reactions were the result of IgE binding, and the late reactions were due to T cell activation. For this reason, in this study, we specifically designed peptides of relatively small size (16/17 residues) and linear configuration to enable them to be presented to T cells in the absence of antigen processing and without binding to IgE.
This approach, using T cell–reactive peptide epitopes that do not cross-link IgE, provides evidence that asthma can be provoked without initial mast cell activation. The mechanism of T cell peptide–induced LPRs, however, remains to be elucidated. One explanation is that T cell activation in the airways leads to mobilization of eosinophils through the elaboration of type 2 and eosinophil active cytokines (i.e., IL-3, IL-4, IL-5, and GM-CSF). Together, these are known to promote selective eosinophil accumulation, migration, activation, and subsequent tissue injury, possibly through the generation of membrane-derived sulphidopeptide leukotrienes as well as the release of basic proteins from the eosinophil crystalloid granule (23). Alternatively, or in addition, T cell activation may be associated with the generation of histamine releasing factors, which in turn activate basophils and/or mast cells to release histamine with subsequent narrowing of already hyperresponsive airways (24). Direct triggering of bronchoconstriction by release of an unidentified T cell mediator may be another possible mechanism. Studies currently underway involving fiberoptic bronchoscopy with BAL and bronchial biopsy, performed at time intervals after peptide-induced LAR, will enable us to test these hypotheses. Our findings are thus of clinical significance, because they may help to identify the critical mediator(s) involved in T cell– as opposed to mast cell–dependent airway narrowing. This may have particular relevance to ongoing chronic asthma, which is believed to have an important T cell component (15, 16) but where the sequence of events between T cell activation and bronchial obstruction are incompletely understood.
It is intriguing that intradermal injection of peptides produced no visible local reaction in the nine subjects but caused marked changes in the airways. One explanation for a reaction at a distal site is that peptides are presented by skin Langerhans cells to circulating T lymphocytes that bear putative T cell homing receptors (analogous to the cutaneous lymphocyte-associated antigen described in patients with atopic dermatitis; reference 25) and that these then traffic to the airways. Alternatively, the peptide may be absorbed via the circulation or lymphatics and reach the airways, where they are taken up by bronchial APCs that in turn interact with locally sensitized T cells.
Related to the mechanism of T cell peptide epitope– induced asthma is the variation in responsiveness amongst the subjects studied, with only 9/40 responding with an isolated LAR. There was no association between the ability of a particular peptide to elicit a T cell–dependent proliferative response in vitro and its capacity to evoke LAR after intradermal injection in vivo, i.e., in vitro mitogenic responses were observed in the absence of an elicited in vivo effect (Fig. 2). These findings cannot be explained solely by the lack of the appropriate HLA haplotype in the nonresponders, as many of these also expressed DR1, DR4, or DR13 (Table I). We believe that responsiveness or nonresponsiveness was likely to have been a reflection of the dose of peptide administered, with the threshold for developing an LAR varying amongst individuals. It is clear that T cell reactivity is likely to have been dependent on HLA molecules restricting peptide presentation and T cell activation (26) to FC1P, with subsequent induction of isolated LARs in subjects in which a threshold dose was achieved. Of interest in this regard was the apparent clustering of HLA-DR13 amongst the subjects in whom these LPRs were observed. Haplotyping of reactors indicated that 4/9 reactors (44%) possessed a DR13 allele, compared with only one 1/30 (3%) nonreactors. Using transfected fibroblast cell lines, the ability of a variety of HLA-DR molecules to present FC1Ps to allergen-specific T cell lines raised from subjects who developed LARs has been assessed. Initially, based upon the high frequency of DR13 among those who developed LARs, we examined the ability of DRB1*1301 and 1302 to present one or more of the FC1Ps to cat allergen extract– specific T cell lines. We demonstrated that FC1P3 could be presented by both DRB1*1301 and 1302. These microvariants of DR13 differ by only one residue at position 86 (valine
glycine; Fig. 6 A), and our results suggest, therefore, that this residue is not critical for the binding of this peptide. Furthermore, we have demonstrated the ability of DRB1*1302 to present FC1P3 to T cells from a DRB1*1301 donor, indicating a degree of degeneracy in T cell recognition of this peptide in the context of closely related microvariants of DR13. The ability of DRB1*1303, which differs from 1301 and 1302 more substantially, to present peptide FC1P3 is currently under investigation.
Investigation of the ability of DRB1*0101 to present FC1Ps revealed promiscuous binding of FC1P3 to both DR1 and DR13 molecules. As shown in Fig. 5 a, the sequences of DRB1*0101 and DRB1*1301/1302 differ substantially within the peptide binding region of the molecules. However, a precedent for promiscuous binding of a single peptide (influenza HA 307–319) to both DR1 and DR13 alleles has been described by Hickling et al. (27). Three of the nine individuals who developed peptide- induced LAR were DR4+, although each expressed a different microvariant of DR4 (Table I). The ability of DR4 microvariants to present FC1Ps was investigated, and it was established that DRB1*0405 was able to present FC1P2 to cat allergen extract–specific T cells from both DRB1*0405 (autologous) and DRB1*0408 individuals. Thus, in common with FC1P3, the second FC1P appears to be capable of binding to more than one HLA molecule. The ability of this peptide to bind to other DR4 microvariants is currently under investigation.
Our findings suggest that induction of the LAR results from MHC-restricted T cell activation. The limited clinical benefit that has so far been observed with peptide immunotherapy may therefore be explained by the fact that only a proportion of patients treated will have been capable of reacting to the peptides, as MHC restriction has not been accounted for (19–21). Furthermore, the observation that individual allergen peptides are capable of promiscuous HLA binding may hold promise for the development of MHC-restricted peptide-based therapies. All of the subjects developing asthmatic reactions expressed DR1, 4, or 13. However, a significant proportion of individuals who did not react also expressed these HLA types. The fact that these subjects did not progress to develop LARs may be due to a deficit in the subjects' T cell repertoire. Alternatively, the lowest possible dose that was found to induce an LAR was used in all individuals, and some of the volunteers who did not respond may have required a higher dose of FC1P to trigger an asthmatic reaction.
It should be noted that the amount of peptide required for systemic administration was
10,000 times that of the intact protein. However, there is clearly a dilutional effect in a situation where an intradermal injection elicits a reaction at a distal site. The minimum dose required to produce an LAR will be calculated more accurately in studies involving direct application of peptides into the airways. It should also be appreciated that any bronchial reaction elicited by intradermal injection of whole cat extract (which can very occasionally occur but did not in this study) would be predominantly anaphylactic in type, with an IgE/ mast cell–dependent bronchospasm occurring within 30 min and usually sooner (28).
Recent studies have demonstrated that an initial transient activation of T cells precedes the development of hyporesponsiveness (17). In support of this concept was the observation that in three of the patients studied, there was abrogation of the LAR on repeat administration of the same dose of peptide that previously caused a 20% or greater fall in FEV1 (Fig. 6 A). This is similar to the experience of Norman et al. (19), who also observed that there was a progressive decline in the incidence and severity of untoward symptoms after continued treatment of cat allergy with IPC1/IPC2, suggesting but not proving that some form of tolerance may have developed after repeated administration. In addition, three subjects who developed LARs in response to FC1P were readministered the same dose at an interval of greater than one year. All three developed LARs of approximately the same magnitude as those that accompanied the initial challenge (Fig. 6 B). These observations suggest that the induction of hyporesponsiveness after a single dose of FC1P is transient, lasting somewhere between a few weeks and one year. Further studies are currently underway to define the precise duration of peptide-induced hyporesponsiveness in humans. This may have further clinical significance if repeated administration of MHC class II–restricted T cell peptide epitopes produce safe and effective long-term "tolerance."
In conclusion, we have demonstrated that intradermal injection of a linear peptide sequence within an allergen at a high dose can elicit a late-phase response by a presumed T cell–dependent mechanism in the absence of an IgE-mediated reaction. This appears to be the first demonstration of asthma provoked by MHC-restricted T cell activation.
| Acknowledgments |
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This work was supported by the Medical Research Council (UK) and the National Asthma Campaign.
Submitted: 17 December 1998
Revised: 19 April 1999
| References |
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1 Kay, A.B. 1997. Concepts of allergy and hypersensitivity. In Allergy and Allergic Diseases, Vol. 1. A.B. Kay, editor. Blackwell Science, Oxford, UK. 23–35.
2 Azzawi M, Bradley B, Jeffery PK, Frew AJ, Wardlaw AJ, Knowles G, Assoufi B, Collins JV, Durham SR & Kay AB. Identification of activated T lymphocytes and eosinophils in bronchial biopsies in stable atopic asthma, Am Rev Respir Dis, 1990, 142, 1407–1413.[Medline]
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17 Hoyne GF, Askonas BA, Hetzel C, Thomas WR & Lamb JR. Regulation of house dust mite responses by intranasally administered peptide: transient activation of CD4+T cells precedes the development of tolerance in vivo, Int Immunol, 1996, 8, 335–342.
18 Briner TJ, Kuo MC, Keating KM, Rogers BL & Greenstein JL. Peripheral T-cell tolerance induced in naive and primed mice by subcutaneous injection of peptides from the major cat allergen Fel d 1, Proc Natl Acad Sci USA, 1993, 90, 7608–7612.
19 Norman PS, Ohman JL Jr, Long AA, Creticos PS, Gefter MA, Shaked Z, Wood RA, Eggleston PA, Hafner KB, Rao P et al.. Treatment of cat allergy with T-cell reactive peptides, Am J Respir Crit Care Med, 1996, 154, 1623–1628.[Abstract]
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25 Santamaria-Babi LF, Picker LJ, Perez-Soler MT, Drzimalla K, Flohr P, Blaser K & Hauser C. Circulating allergen-reactive T cells from patients with atopic dermatitis and allergic contact dermatitis express the skin-selective homing receptor, the cutaneous lymphocyte-associated antigen, J Exp Med, 1995, 181, 1935–1940.
26 Zinkernagel RM & Doherty PC. H-2 compatibility requirement for T cell–mediated lysis of target cells infected with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus. Different cytotoxic T cell specificities are associated with structures coded for in H-2K or H-2D, J Exp Med, 1975, 141, 1427–1436.
27 Hickling JK, Fenton CM, Howland K, Marsh SG & Rothbard JB. Peptides recognized by class I restricted T cells also bind to MHC class II molecules, Int Immunol, 1990, 2, 435–441.
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