| Literature DB >> 26056938 |
Ronit Mazor1, Chin-Hsien Tai2, Byungkook Lee3, Ira Pastan4.
Abstract
The ability to identify immunogenic determinants that activate T-cells is important for the development of new vaccines, allergy therapy and protein therapeutics. In silico MHC-II binding prediction algorithms are often used for T-cell epitope identification. To understand how well those programs predict immunogenicity, we computed HLA binding to peptides spanning the sequence of PE38, a fragment of an anti-cancer immunotoxin, and compared the predicted and experimentally identified T-cell epitopes. We found that the prediction for individual donors did not correlate well with the experimental data. Furthermore, prediction of T-cell epitopes in an HLA heterogenic population revealed that the two strongest epitopes were predicted at multiple cutoffs but the third epitope was predicted negative at all cutoffs and overall 4/9 epitopes were missed at several cutoffs. We conclude that MHC class-II binding predictions are not sufficient to predict the T-cell epitopes in PE38 and should be supplemented by experimental work. Published by Elsevier B.V.Entities:
Keywords: HLA binding algorithm; HLA binding prediction; Immunogenicity; MHC alleles; T-cell activation; T-cell epitope
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26056938 PMCID: PMC4604018 DOI: 10.1016/j.jim.2015.06.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Methods ISSN: 0022-1759 Impact factor: 2.287