(Press-News.org) An engineered protein turns off the kind of immune cells most likely to damage tissue as part of Type-1 diabetes, hepatitis, multiple sclerosis, shows a new study in mice.
In these autoimmune diseases, T cells mistakenly target the body’s own tissues instead of invading viruses or bacteria as they would during normal immune responses. Treatments focused on T cells have been elusive because blocking their action broadly weakens the immune system and creates risk for infections and cancer.
Published online June 30 in the journal Cell, the study revealed that holding closely together two protein groups (signaling complexes) on T cells, including one found more often on T cells involved autoimmune disease, shuts down those T cells in a limited way.
Led by researchers at NYU Langone Health, the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and Zhejiang University, the study built on biology newly discovered by the team to design an antibody that attached to both T cell signaling complexes, the T cell receptor and the LAG-3 checkpoint, held them closely together, and eliminated autoimmune tissue damage in three mouse models of disease.
Antibodies are proteins made by the immune system that label specific markers on cells for notice by the immune system. Researchers learned decades ago to engineer antibodies to target certain molecules as treatments, and more recently, antibodies that attach to two targets.
“Our findings reveal an intricate mechanism that enables a careful treatment approach to T-cell driven autoimmune diseases, which currently lack effective immunotherapies,” said co-senior study author Jun Wang, PhD., assistant professor in the Department of Pathology at NYU Grossman School of Medicine.
Held in Place
The study results are based on the presence on T cells of T-cell receptors (TCRs) and checkpoints. TCRs, although shaped so that bits of invading bacteria or viruses fit into them to activate the T cell, are turned on by the body’s own proteins in autoimmune diseases. Checkpoints like LAG-3 are also turned on by specific signaling partners, but when this occurs they have the opposite effect of TCRs, suppressing the T cell’s activity.
Also important to the new study results is that TCR-triggering molecules must be presented to T cell receptors by another set of immune cells that “swallow” foreign (e.g., microbial) or bodily substances and display on their surfaces through protein groups called major histocompatibility complexes (MHC-II) just the small protein pieces that activate a given TCR.
”We discovered that, as a T cell’s surface draws close to the MHC-II presenting its TCR trigger molecule, the T cell receptor gets particularly close to LAG-3”, said co-first author Jasper Du, a third-year medical student in Dr. Wang’s lab. “For the first time, we found that this proximity is central to the ability of LAG-3 to dial back T cell activity.”
Mechanistically, the research team found that the proximity of LAG-3 lets it loosely stick to part of the T cell receptor called CD3ε (like two oily globs interacting). This attachment was found to pull on CD3ε enough to disrupt its interaction an enzyme called Lck, which is crucial for T cell activation. MHC-II can theoretically attach to LAG-3 and TCR at the same time, but not frequently enough to maximize LAG-3’s ability to dial down T cells, the researchers said.
In addition, “checkpoints” like LAG-3 are used by the immune system to turn off T cells when the right signals, given off by normal cells, dock in to avert self-attack (autoimmunity). Cancer cells put off signaling molecules that dock into checkpoints and sabotage the ability of T cells to attack them. Therapies called checkpoint inhibitors counter this effect.
LAG-3 turns off T cells, but less easily due to its spatial requirements than another checkpoint called PD-1. This feature makes LAG-3 inhibitors weaker as anti-cancer cancer treatment than PD-1-inhibiting antibody treatments that have become a mainstay, but likely better when the immune system is overactive, and targeted T cell suppression is required for maximum safe effect.
Based on their discovery of the critical role of TCR proximity in LAG-3 function, the research team designed a molecule that enforces LAG-3/TCR proximity to achieve better LAG-3-dependent TCR inhibition and suppression of T cell responses. Their “bi-specific” antibody held LAG-3 and the T cell receptor together more strongly than MHC-II, and without depending on it.
The current authors’ bispecific antibody, named the LAG-3/TCR Bispecific T cell Silencer or BiTS, potently suppressed T cell responses and lessened inflammatory damage to insulin-producing cells (insulitis) in BiTS-treated mice with a version of Type 1 diabetes. In autoimmune models of hepatitis, BiTS treatment reduced T cell infiltration and liver damage.
With the diabetes and hepatitis disease models largely driven by one type of T cells (CD8+), the team also used a mouse model of multiple sclerosis known to be driven by a second major T cell type (CD4+). The team treated mice prone to develop multiple sclerosis with short-term, preventive BiTS prior to the onset of disease symptoms, and BiTS-treated mice had reduced disease by a standard measure.
“Our study advances our understanding of LAG-3 biology and may foster more proximity-based, spatially-guided therapeutic designs like BiTS as immunotherapy for other human diseases,” said co-first author Jia You, a research scientist in Dr. Wang’s lab.
***
Along with Dr. Wang, corresponding authors of the study were Jack Wei Chen of the Department of Cell Biology and Department of Cardiology at the Second Affiliated Hospital Zhejiang University School of Medicine in China; as well Jizhong Lou of the State Key Laboratory of Epigenetic Regulation and Intervention, Institute of Biophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Also other authors from the NYU Grossman School of Medicine were Jia Liu, Qiao Lu, Connor James, Ryan Foster, and Eric Rao in the Department of Pathology at New York University Grossman School of Medicine; Meng-ju Lin and Catherine Pei-ju Lu in the Hansjörg Wyss Department of Plastic Surgery and Department of Cell Biology; and Michael Cammer at the Microscopy Core, Division of Advanced Research Technologies, and Shohei Koide of the Perlmutter Cancer Center. Also making important contributions were Hui Chen at the State Key Laboratory of Epigenetic Regulation and Intervention, Institute of Biophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, and Yong Zhang from University of Chinese Academy of Sciences; Wei Hu and Jie Gao at The Second Affiliated Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine; and Weiwei Yin in the Key Laboratory for Biomedical Engineering of the Ministry of Education, College of Biomedical Engineering and Instrument Science, also at Zhejiang University.
The study was supported principally by a translational advancement award from the Judith and Stewart Colton Center for Autoimmunity at NYU Langone Health. Also funding the study were a Cancer Center Support Grant P30CA016087, NIH grant S10OD021727, the NYU melanoma SPORE and NIH R37CA273333, and an NIH/NIAMS T32 grant (AR069515-07). The biophysical analysis part of this work was also supported by multiple grants from National Science Foundations of China (32090044, T2394512, 32200549, and T2394511).
Dr. Wang, Du and You are listed as inventors of pending patents related to the study. NYU Langone Health and its Technology Opportunities & Ventures have formed a related startup company, Remunix Inc., with Dr. Wang as founder and shareholders, to license and commercialize the patents. In addition, Dr. Wang serves as a consultant for Rootpath Genomics, Bristol Myers Squibb, LAV, Regeneron, and Hanmi. Dr. Koide has reported interests in Aethon Therapeutics and Revalia Bio not related to this study. These relationships are managed in keeping with the policies of NYU Langone Health.
###
About NYU Langone Health
NYU Langone Health is a fully integrated health system that consistently achieves the best patient outcomes through a rigorous focus on quality that has resulted in some of the lowest mortality rates in the nation. Vizient Inc. has ranked NYU Langone the No. 1 comprehensive academic medical center in the country for three years in a row, and U.S. News & World Report recently placed nine of its clinical specialties among the top five in the nation. NYU Langone offers a comprehensive range of medical services with one high standard of care across 7 inpatient locations, its Perlmutter Cancer Center, and more than 320 outpatient locations in the New York area and Florida. With $14.2 billion in revenue this year, the system also includes two tuition-free medical schools, in Manhattan and on Long Island, and a vast research enterprise.
Media Inquiries:
Greg Williams
Phone: 212-404-3500
Gregory.Williams@NYULangone.org
END
Finding suggests treatment approach for autoimmune diseases
2025-06-30
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
A new “link” to triple-negative breast cancer
2025-06-30
Breast cancer is one of the most common cancers among women in the United States. Thanks to decades of fundamental research, it’s also one of the most curable. The exception is a particularly aggressive variant known as triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). It accounts for 10 to 15 percent of all breast cancer cases. It disproportionately affects younger and African American women. No effective therapies exist. A new discovery by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Professor David Spector and graduate student Wenbo Xu—published in Molecular Cancer Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research—could help ...
Cool is cool wherever you are
2025-06-30
From Chile to China, cultures vary greatly around the globe, but people in at least a dozen countries agree about what it means to be cool, according to research published by the American Psychological Association.
The researchers conducted experiments with almost 6,000 participants from countries around the world and found that cool people have surprisingly similar personalities. Even though Eastern and Western cultures often differ in many cultural attitudes, cool people were universally perceived to be more extraverted, hedonistic, powerful, adventurous, open and autonomous.
“Everyone wants to be cool, or at least ...
Meteorological satellites observe temperatures on Venus
2025-06-30
Imaging data from Japan’s Himawari-8 and -9 meteorological satellites have been successfully used to monitor temporal changes in Venus’ cloud-top temperature, revealing unseen patterns in the temperature structure of various waves. A team led by the University of Tokyo collated infrared images from 2015–25 to estimate brightness temperatures on day to year scales. The results demonstrate that meteorological satellites can serve as additional eyes to access the Venusian atmosphere from space ...
New hope for brain cancer: FAU awarded grants for glioblastoma treatment
2025-06-30
Florida Atlantic University researchers have secured two key grants to investigate targeting a gene for the first time as a new approach to treat glioblastoma, a very aggressive and fast-growing type of brain cancer.
Malignant gliomas, such as glioblastoma multiforme and astrocytomas, are the most common type of primary brain tumor in the United States. They make up about 78% of all malignant brain tumors. Although these tumors are not very common, especially in the U.S., they cause a high number of cancer deaths because they are so aggressive.
These awards, granted by the Florida Department of Health’s Cancer Connect program for $562,000 and the Palm Health Foundation for ...
AI for Good Global Summit 2025 - Exclusive press tour (ITU/United Nations)
2025-06-30
The United Nations' digital tech agency, ITU, invites reporters to an exclusive press tour on Monday, 7 July, before the official opening of the AI for Good Global Summit 2025.
With the rapid advance of artificial intelligence – from autonomous AI agents to brain-machine interfaces, self-driving vehicles, and a growing range of quantum technologies – AI for Good highlights global AI action to safeguard the future.
AI for Good will feature talks from AI leaders and 100+ demos showcasing AI innovations to deliver ...
Bacteria hijack tick cell defenses to spread disease
2025-06-30
PULLMAN, Wash. – Washington State University researchers have discovered how the bacteria that cause anaplasmosis and Lyme disease hijack cellular processes in ticks to ensure their survival and spread to new hosts, including humans.
Based in the College of Veterinary Medicine, the team found that the bacteria can manipulate a protein known as ATF6, which helps cells detect and respond to infection, to support its own growth and survival inside the tick. The findings, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, could serve as a launching point for developing methods to eliminate the bacteria in ticks before they are transmitted to humans and ...
New study shows omega-6 does not increase inflammation
2025-06-30
June 30, 2025, Sioux Falls, SD: A new study published in Nutrients offers new insight into omega-6 and whether it is truly the proinflammatory fatty acid many claim it to be.
There is currently a heightened interest in the health effects of seed oils, many of which are rich in linoleic acid (LA), an essential omega-6 fatty acid. Many have claimed that western diets contain “too much” LA and that many diseases of modernity stem from the increased intake of LA over the last century.
This narrative places the blame on excess inflammation presumably caused by higher LA intakes. But ...
Firms raise the bar after missing the target: Strategic use of overestimated earnings targets
2025-06-30
When companies miss their earnings targets, one might expect them to lower expectations and rebuild investor trust slowly. However, many do the opposite. They announced even higher goals for the next period. A team of researchers, led by Professor Jungwon Min from Inha University, South Korea, including Professor Hyonok Kim from Tokyo Keizai University and Professor Konari Uchida from the Graduate School of Business and Finance, Waseda University, Japan, published a new study online in the journal Review of Managerial Science on June 03, 2025. It uncovers how firms strategically ...
Pusan National University scientists uncover gene mutation tied to poor outcomes in transplant patients
2025-06-30
Organ transplantation has significantly revolutionized the treatment of patients with organ failure. However, the recipient’s immune system recognizes transplanted organs as foreign and elicits a defensive response that can lead to serious complications. Bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome (BOS) is one such complication that arises frequently following lung transplantation (LT) and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). BOS is characterized by the narrowing of airways, fibrosis, and inflammation in the lung tissue leading to breathing difficulties and poor graft survival.
Immune mechanisms and shared pathological ...
How a common herpes virus outsmarts the immune system
2025-06-30
PITTSBURGH, June 30, 2025 – New research from the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and La Jolla Institute for Immunology, published today in Nature Microbiology, reveals an opportunity for developing a therapy against cytomegalovirus (CMV), the leading infectious cause of birth defects in the United States.
Researchers discovered a previously unappreciated mechanism by which CMV, a herpes virus that infects the majority of the world’s adult population, enters cells that line the blood vessels and contributes to vascular disease. In addition to using molecular machinery that is shared by ...