Chronic Beryllium Disease (CBD) is a lung disease similar clinically to other granulomatous diseases such as sarcoidosis, schizomyosis and tuberculosis. Approximately 800,000 individuals are at risk for developing the disease, which is caused by metal and relatively insoluble compounds of beryllium. The disease begins as a sensitizing cell mediated immune response to beryllium antigen, which develops into a non-caseating granuloma. Evidence strongly suggests that CD4 plus T-cells and MHC class 2 allele HALDPB1*0201 are important in the immunopathogenesis of CBD. How the T-cell receptor (TCR) on the T-cells interacts with beryllium and the MHC and the mechanism that gives rises to the pathogenesis of CBD is unknown. To test critically the hypothesis that a specific MHC class 2 allele interacts with beryllium and induces T-cell responses that contribute directly to the pathogenesis of CBD, it is proposed to develop a family of novel recombinant HLA-DP constructs that will selectively eliminate inflammatory T-cell responses to beryllium. This will enable the testing of the role of such T-cell responses in CBD. Development and characterization of these novel constructs will provide the opportunity to identify unique points of intervention for controlling T-cells and in turn, the T-cell immune response and repertoire. These molecules may provide a template for engineering a novel treatment of CBD. The PI proposes to: 1) Characterize the recombinant HLA-DP constructs biochemically, 2) Characterize the binding interaction of beryllium with the recombinant HLA-DP constructs, 3) Identify high potency BE/antigen combinations responsible for proliferation of pathogenic T-cells and 4) To determine optimal conditions for tolerizing beryllium specific human T-cells.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01ES010554-03
Application #
6525312
Study Section
Alcohol and Toxicology Subcommittee 4 (ALTX)
Program Officer
Mastin, Patrick
Project Start
2000-08-18
Project End
2004-07-31
Budget Start
2002-08-01
Budget End
2003-07-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2002
Total Cost
$346,014
Indirect Cost
Name
Oregon Health and Science University
Department
Neurology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
009584210
City
Portland
State
OR
Country
United States
Zip Code
97239
Sinha, Sushmita; Subramanian, Sandhya; Miller, Lisa et al. (2009) Cytokine switch and bystander suppression of autoimmune responses to multiple antigens in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis by a single recombinant T-cell receptor ligand. J Neurosci 29:3816-23
Fontenot, Andrew P; Edwards, David M; Chou, Yuan K et al. (2006) Self-presentation of beryllium by BAL CD4+ T cells: T cell-T cell interactions and their potential role in chronic beryllium disease. Eur J Immunol 36:930-9
Fontenot, Andrew P; Keizer, Timothy S; McCleskey, Mark et al. (2006) Recombinant HLA-DP2 binds beryllium and tolerizes beryllium-specific pathogenic CD4+ T cells. J Immunol 177:3874-83
Chou, Yuan K; Edwards, David M; Weinberg, Andrew D et al. (2005) Activation pathways implicate anti-HLA-DP and anti-LFA-1 antibodies as lead candidates for intervention in chronic berylliosis. J Immunol 174:4316-24
Burrows, Gregory G (2005) Systemic immunomodulation of autoimmune disease using MHC-derived recombinant TCR ligands. Curr Drug Targets Inflamm Allergy 4:185-93
Rich, Cathleen; Link, Jason M; Zamora, Alex et al. (2004) Myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein-35-55 peptide induces severe chronic experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis in HLA-DR2-transgenic mice. Eur J Immunol 34:1251-61
Wang, Chunhe; Mooney, Jeffery L; Meza-Romero, Roberto et al. (2003) Recombinant TCR ligand induces early TCR signaling and a unique pattern of downstream activation. J Immunol 171:1934-40
Chang, J W; Mechling, D E; Bachinger, H P et al. (2001) Design, engineering, and production of human recombinant t cell receptor ligands derived from human leukocyte antigen DR2. J Biol Chem 276:24170-6
Burrows, G G; Chou, Y K; Wang, C et al. (2001) Rudimentary TCR signaling triggers default IL-10 secretion by human Th1 cells. J Immunol 167:4386-95