Peptide immunotherapy in allergic asthma generates IL-10–dependent immunological tolerance associated with linked epitope suppression

John D. Campbell(Lung Institute), Karen Buckland(Lung Institute), Sarah J. McMillan(Lung Institute), Jennifer Kearley(Lung Institute), W. Oldfield(Lung Institute), Lawrence J. Stern(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), Hans Grönlund(Karolinska Institutet), Marianne van Hage(Karolinska Institutet), Catherine J. Reynolds(National Institutes of Health), Rosemary J. Boyton(National Institutes of Health), Stephen Cobbold, A.B. Kay(National Institutes of Health), Daniel M. Altmann(Lung Institute), Clare M. Lloyd(Lung Institute), Mark Larché(National Institutes of Health)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
June 15, 2009
Cited by 208Open Access
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Abstract

Treatment of patients with allergic asthma using low doses of peptides containing T cell epitopes from Fel d 1, the major cat allergen, reduces allergic sensitization and improves surrogate markers of disease. Here, we demonstrate a key immunological mechanism, linked epitope suppression, associated with this therapeutic effect. Treatment with selected epitopes from a single allergen resulted in suppression of responses to other ("linked") epitopes within the same molecule. This phenomenon was induced after peptide immunotherapy in human asthmatic subjects and in a novel HLA-DR1 transgenic mouse model of asthma. Tracking of allergen-specific T cells using DR1 tetramers determined that suppression was associated with the induction of interleukin (IL)-10(+) T cells that were more abundant than T cells specific for the single-treatment peptide and was reversed by anti-IL-10 receptor administration. Resolution of airway pathophysiology in this model was associated with reduced recruitment, proliferation, and effector function of allergen-specific Th2 cells. Our results provide, for the first time, in vivo evidence of linked epitope suppression and IL-10 induction in both human allergic disease and a mouse model designed to closely mimic peptide therapy in humans.


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