| Literature DB >> 25629004 |
Geir Åge Løset1, Gøril Berntzen2, Terje Frigstad2, Sylvie Pollmann2, Kristin S Gunnarsen3, Inger Sandlie4.
Abstract
Cancer immunotherapy has finally come of age, demonstrated by recent progress in strategies that engage the endogenous adaptive immune response in tumor killing. Occasionally, significant and durable tumor regression has been achieved. A giant leap forward was the demonstration that the pre-existing polyclonal T cell repertoire could be re-directed by use of cloned T cell receptors (TCRs), to obtain a defined tumor-specific pool of T cells. However, the procedure must be performed with caution to avoid deleterious cross-reactivity. Here, the use of engineered soluble TCRs may represent a safer, yet powerful, alternative. There is also a need for deeper understanding of the processes that underlie antigen presentation in disease and homeostasis, how tumor-specific peptides are generated, and how epitope spreading evolves during tumor development. Due to its plasticity, the pivotal interaction where a TCR engages a peptide/MHC (pMHC) also requires closer attention. For this purpose, phage display as a tool to evolve cloned TCRs represents an attractive avenue to generate suitable reagents allowing the study of defined pMHC presentation, TCR engagement, as well as for the discovery of novel therapeutic leads. Here, we highlight important aspects of the current status in this field.Entities:
Keywords: T cell receptor; antigen presentation; immunotherapy; phage display; tumor immunity
Year: 2015 PMID: 25629004 PMCID: PMC4290511 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2014.00378
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Stability engineering and affinity maturation of soluble TCRs. (A) Stability engineering of scTCR. The variable (V) regions of an individual TCR (1) are cloned and connected via a synthetic linker (55). This scTCR is expressed as fusion to the M13 pIII capsid protein (2). The scTCR is then diversified by in vitro mutagenesis (3). This collection of mutagenized scTCRs are expressed as a high valence display phage library (4), which is challenged with increased temperature, unfavorable acid/base, or chaotropic conditions (5). Stabilized scTCR resisting aggregation despite the challenge is retrieved by capture on a conformation-specific ligand, such as an Ab (6). (B) Affinity maturation of scTCR. The V regions of an individual TCR (1) are cloned and expressed as a scTCR fusion to either the M13 pIII (55), or pIX capsid protein (56) (2). Individual TCR α- and β-chain CDR loops of the scTCR are randomized to create diversity (3). This collection of mutagenized scTCRs is then expressed as a low (4a) or high (4b) valence display phage library, which is selected against pMHC (5a and b). (C) Affinity maturation of dsTCR. The V regions of an individual TCR (1) are cloned and expressed as fusions to prototypic constant (C) domains stabilized by an artificial disulfide bridge, hence reconstituting the complete TCR ectodomain architecture (43). This recombinant dsTCR is then expressed as fusion to the M13 pIII capsid protein (2). Individual TCR α- and β-chain CDR loops of the dsTCR are randomized to create diversity (3). Usually this process is confined to the in vivo pMHC specificity-determining CDR3 loops (57), but has also been successfully applied to the germ-line encoded CDR2 only (58, 59). This collection of mutagenized dsTCRs is then expressed as a low valence display phage library (57), which is selected against pMHC (5). (D) Screening of engineered dsTCR and scTCR. The stability engineered (A), or affinity matured (B) scTCR is reformatted to soluble, periplasmic expression (46), and individual mutated scTCRs screened for functionality against target immobilized on solid phase. The screening for desired binders following dsTCR selection is done on phage due to incompatibility with high-throughput soluble dsTCR screening (45).