Literature DB >> 19786555

Fine structural variations of alphabetaTCRs selected by vaccination with natural versus altered self-antigen in melanoma patients.

Sébastien Wieckowski1, Petra Baumgaertner, Patricia Corthesy, Verena Voelter, Pedro Romero, Daniel E Speiser, Nathalie Rufer.   

Abstract

Immunotherapy of cancer is often performed with altered "analog" peptide Ags optimized for HLA class I binding, resulting in enhanced immunogenicity, but the induced T cell responses require further evaluation. Recently, we demonstrated fine specificity differences and enhanced recognition of naturally presented Ag by T cells after vaccination with natural Melan-A/MART-1 peptide, as compared with analog peptide. In this study, we compared the TCR primary structures of 1489 HLA-A*0201/Melan-A(26-35)-specific CD8 T cells derived from both cohorts of patients. Although a strong preference for TRAV12-2 segment usage was present in nearly all patients, usage of particular TRAJ gene segments and CDR3alpha composition differed slightly after vaccination with natural vs analog peptide. Moreover, TCR beta-chain repertoires were broader after natural than analog peptide vaccination. In all patients, we observed a marked conservation of the CDR3beta amino acid composition with recurrent sequences centered on a glycyl-leucyl/valyl/alanyl-glycyl motif. In contrast to viral-specific TCR repertoires, such "public" motifs were primarily expressed by nondominant T cell clonotypes, which contrasted with "private" CDR3beta signatures frequently found in T cell clonotypes that dominated repertoires of individual patients. Interestingly, no differences in functional avidity were observed between public and private T cell clonotypes. Collectively, our data indicate that T cell repertoires generated against natural or analog Melan-A peptide exhibited slightly distinct but otherwise overlapping and structurally conserved TCR features, suggesting that the differences in binding affinity/avidity of TCRs toward pMHC observed in the two cohorts of patients are caused by subtle structural TCR variations.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19786555     DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.0901460

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Immunol        ISSN: 0022-1767            Impact factor:   5.422


  30 in total

Review 1.  Determinants of public T cell responses.

Authors:  Hanjie Li; Congting Ye; Guoli Ji; Jiahuai Han
Journal:  Cell Res       Date:  2012-01-03       Impact factor: 25.617

2.  Structures of native and affinity-enhanced WT1 epitopes bound to HLA-A*0201: implications for WT1-based cancer therapeutics.

Authors:  Oleg Y Borbulevych; Priscilla Do; Brian M Baker
Journal:  Mol Immunol       Date:  2010-07-08       Impact factor: 4.407

3.  Enhanced induction of HIV-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes by dendritic cell-targeted delivery of SOCS-1 siRNA.

Authors:  Sandesh Subramanya; Myriam Armant; Janelle R Salkowitz; Alice M Nyakeriga; Viraga Haridas; Maroof Hasan; Anju Bansal; Paul A Goepfert; Katherine K Wynn; Kristin Ladell; David A Price; Manjunath N; June Kan-Mitchell; Premlata Shankar
Journal:  Mol Ther       Date:  2010-07-20       Impact factor: 11.454

4.  In vivo 6-thioguanine-resistant T cells from melanoma patients have public TCR and share TCR beta amino acid sequences with melanoma-reactive T cells.

Authors:  Cindy L Zuleger; Michael D Macklin; Bret L Bostwick; Qinglin Pei; Michael A Newton; Mark R Albertini
Journal:  J Immunol Methods       Date:  2010-12-21       Impact factor: 2.303

5.  Synthesis and Biological Evaluation of Hapten-Clicked Analogues of The Antigenic Peptide Melan-A/MART-126(27L)-35.

Authors:  Marion Tarbe; John J Miles; Emily S J Edwards; Kim M Miles; Andrew K Sewell; Brian M Baker; Stéphane Quideau
Journal:  ChemMedChem       Date:  2020-04-06       Impact factor: 3.466

Review 6.  Improving T cell responses to modified peptides in tumor vaccines.

Authors:  Jonathan D Buhrman; Jill E Slansky
Journal:  Immunol Res       Date:  2013-03       Impact factor: 2.829

7.  Elevated tumor-associated antigen expression suppresses variant peptide vaccine responses.

Authors:  Charles B Kemmler; Eric T Clambey; Ross M Kedl; Jill E Slansky
Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  2011-09-21       Impact factor: 5.422

8.  Augmenting antitumor T-cell responses to mimotope vaccination by boosting with native tumor antigens.

Authors:  Jonathan D Buhrman; Kimberly R Jordan; Lance U'ren; Jonathan Sprague; Charles B Kemmler; Jill E Slansky
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2012-11-16       Impact factor: 12.701

9.  Large-scale detection of antigen-specific T cells using peptide-MHC-I multimers labeled with DNA barcodes.

Authors:  Amalie Kai Bentzen; Andrea Marion Marquard; Rikke Lyngaa; Sunil Kumar Saini; Sofie Ramskov; Marco Donia; Lina Such; Andrew J S Furness; Nicholas McGranahan; Rachel Rosenthal; Per Thor Straten; Zoltan Szallasi; Inge Marie Svane; Charles Swanton; Sergio A Quezada; Søren Nyboe Jakobsen; Aron Charles Eklund; Sine Reker Hadrup
Journal:  Nat Biotechnol       Date:  2016-08-29       Impact factor: 54.908

Review 10.  Profile of a serial killer: cellular and molecular approaches to study individual cytotoxic T-cells following therapeutic vaccination.

Authors:  Emanuela M Iancu; Petra Baumgaertner; Sébastien Wieckowski; Daniel E Speiser; Nathalie Rufer
Journal:  J Biomed Biotechnol       Date:  2010-11-14
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