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Quantifying immunoregulation by autoantigen-specific T-regulatory type 1 cells in mice with simultaneous hepatic and extra-hepatic autoimmune disorders
Authors:Hassan Jamaleddine  Pere Santamaria  Anmar Khadra
Institution:1. Department of Physiology, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada;2. Department of Microbiology, Immunology & Infectious Diseases, University of Calgary, Calgary, AL, Canada

Institut D’Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer, Carrer del Rosselló, Barcelona, Spain

Abstract:Nanoparticles (NPs) displaying autoimmune disease-relevant peptide-major histocompatibility complex class II molecules (pMHCII-NPs) trigger cognate T-regulatory type 1 (Tr1)-cell formation and expansion, capable of reversing organ-specific autoimmune responses. These pMHCII-NPs that display epitopes from mitochondrial protein can blunt the progression of both autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) and experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) in mice carrying either disease. However, with co-morbid mice having both diseases, these pMHCII-NPs selectively treat AIH. In contrast, pMHCII-NPs displaying central nervous system (CNS)-specific epitopes can efficiently treat CNS autoimmunity, both in the absence and presence of AIH, without having any effects on the progression of the latter. Here, we develop a compartmentalized population model of T-cells in co-morbid mice to identify the mechanisms by which Tr1 cells mediate organ-specific immunoregulation. We perform time-series simulations and bifurcation analyses to study how varying physiological parameters, including local cognate antigenic load and rates of Tr1-cell recruitment and retention, affect T-cell allocation and Tr1-mediated immunoregulation. Various regimes of behaviour, including ‘competitive autoimmunity’ where pMHCII-NP-treatment fails against both diseases, are identified and compared with experimental observations. Our results reveal that a transient delay in Tr1-cell recruitment to the CNS, resulting from inflammation-dependent Tr1-cell allocation, accounts for the liver-centric effects of AIH-specific pMHCII-NPs in co-morbid mice as compared with mice exclusively having EAE. They also suggest that cognate autoantigen expression and local Tr1-cell retention are key determinants of effective regulatory-cell function. These results thus provide new insights into the rules that govern Tr1-cell recruitment and their autoregulatory function.
Keywords:compartmental cell population model  nanomedicine  simultaneous autoimmune disorders  steady-state and transient dynamics  Tr1-cell recruitment and retention
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