| Literature DB >> 25576336 |
Sally A Hunsucker1, Colleen S McGary1, Benjamin G Vincent1, Atim A Enyenihi2, Jennifer P Waugh3, Karen P McKinnon1, Lisa M Bixby1, Patricia A Ropp1, James M Coghill4, William A Wood4, Don A Gabriel4, Stefanie Sarantopoulos4, Thomas C Shea4, Jonathan S Serody4, Gheath Alatrash5, Tania Rodriguez-Cruz6, Gregory Lizée6, Adam S Buntzman7, Jeffrey A Frelinger7, Gary L Glish2, Paul M Armistead8.
Abstract
Testing of T cell-based cancer therapeutics often involves measuring cancer antigen-specific T-cell populations with the assumption that they arise from in vivo clonal expansion. This analysis, using peptide/MHC tetramers, is often ambiguous. From a leukemia cell line, we identified a CDK4-derived peptide epitope, UNC-CDK4-1 (ALTPVVVTL), that bound HLA-A*02:01 with high affinity and could induce CD8⁺ T-cell responses in vitro. We identified UNC-CDK4-1/HLA-A*02:01 tetramer⁺ populations in 3 of 6 patients with acute myeloid leukemia who had undergone allogeneic stem cell transplantation. Using tetramer-based, single-cell sorting and T-cell receptor β (TCRβ) sequencing, we identified recurrent UNC-CDK4-1 tetramer-associated TCRβ clonotypes in a patient with a UNC-CDK4-1 tetramer⁺ population, suggesting in vivo T-cell expansion to UNC-CDK4-1. In parallel, we measured the patient's TCRβ repertoire and found it to be highly restricted/oligoclonal. The UNC-CDK4-1 tetramer-associated TCRβ clonotypes represented >17% of the entire TCRβ repertoire-far in excess of the UNC-CDK4-1 tetramer⁺ frequency-indicating that the recurrent TCRβ clonotypes identified from UNC-CDK-4-1 tetramer⁺ cells were likely a consequence of the extremely constrained T-cell repertoire in the patient and not in vivo UNC-CDK4-1-driven clonal T-cell expansion. Mapping recurrent TCRβ clonotype sequences onto TCRβ repertoires can help confirm or refute antigen-specific T-cell expansion in vivo. ©2015 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25576336 PMCID: PMC4351150 DOI: 10.1158/2326-6066.CIR-14-0001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Immunol Res ISSN: 2326-6066 Impact factor: 11.151