Literature DB >> 32184781

GPU-Accelerated Discovery of Pathogen-Derived Molecular Mimics of a T-Cell Insulin Epitope.

Thomas Whalley1,2, Garry Dolton1, Paul E Brown3, Aaron Wall1, Linda Wooldridge4, Hugo van den Berg5, Anna Fuller1, Jade R Hopkins1, Michael D Crowther1, Meriem Attaf1, Robin R Knight6, David K Cole1, Mark Peakman6, Andrew K Sewell1,2, Barbara Szomolay1,2.   

Abstract

The strong links between (Human Leukocyte Antigen) HLA, infection and autoimmunity combine to implicate T-cells as primary triggers of autoimmune disease (AD). T-cell crossreactivity between microbially-derived peptides and self-peptides has been shown to break tolerance and trigger AD in experimental animal models. Detailed examination of the potential for T-cell crossreactivity to trigger human AD will require means of predicting which peptides might be recognised by autoimmune T-cell receptors (TCRs). Recent developments in high throughput sequencing and bioinformatics mean that it is now possible to link individual TCRs to specific pathologies for the first time. Deconvolution of TCR function requires knowledge of TCR specificity. Positional Scanning Combinatorial Peptide Libraries (PS-CPLs) can be used to predict HLA-restriction and define antigenic peptides derived from self and pathogen proteins. In silico search of the known terrestrial proteome with a prediction algorithm that ranks potential antigens in order of recognition likelihood requires complex, large-scale computations over several days that are infeasible on a personal computer. We decreased the time required for peptide searching to under 30 min using multiple blocks on graphics processing units (GPUs). This time-efficient, cost-effective hardware accelerator was used to screen bacterial and fungal human pathogens for peptide sequences predicted to activate a T-cell clone, InsB4, that was isolated from a patient with type 1 diabetes and recognised the insulin B-derived epitope HLVEALYLV in the context of disease-risk allele HLA A*0201. InsB4 was shown to kill HLA A*0201+ human insulin producing β-cells demonstrating that T-cells with this specificity might contribute to disease. The GPU-accelerated algorithm and multispecies pathogen proteomic databases were validated to discover pathogen-derived peptide sequences that acted as super-agonists for the InsB4 T-cell clone. Peptide-MHC tetramer binding and surface plasmon resonance were used to confirm that the InsB4 TCR bound to the highest-ranked peptide agonists derived from infectious bacteria and fungi. Adoption of GPU-accelerated prediction of T-cell agonists has the capacity to revolutionise our understanding of AD by identifying potential targets for autoimmune T-cells. This approach has further potential for dissecting T-cell responses to infectious disease and cancer.
Copyright © 2020 Whalley, Dolton, Brown, Wall, Wooldridge, van den Berg, Fuller, Hopkins, Crowther, Attaf, Knight, Cole, Peakman, Sewell and Szomolay.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Compute Unified Device Architecture (CUDA); Nvidia; T-cell receptor; general-purpose computing on graphics processing units (GP-GPU); insulin; molecular mimicry; peptide-HLA; type 1 diabetes

Year:  2020        PMID: 32184781      PMCID: PMC7058665          DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.00296

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Front Immunol        ISSN: 1664-3224            Impact factor:   7.561


  64 in total

Review 1.  Specificity and degeneracy of T cells.

Authors:  Darcy B Wilson; Dianne H Wilson; Kim Schroder; Clemencia Pinilla; Sylvie Blondelle; Richard A Houghten; K Christopher Garcia
Journal:  Mol Immunol       Date:  2004-02       Impact factor: 4.407

2.  Novel strategy for identification of candidate cytotoxic T-cell epitopes from human preproinsulin.

Authors:  L Chang; L Kjer-Nielsen; S Flynn; A G Brooks; S I Mannering; M C Honeyman; L C Harrison; J McCluskey; A W Purcell
Journal:  Tissue Antigens       Date:  2003-11

3.  Molecular Dynamics Simulations Accelerated by GPU for Biological Macromolecules with a Non-Ewald Scheme for Electrostatic Interactions.

Authors:  Tadaaki Mashimo; Yoshifumi Fukunishi; Narutoshi Kamiya; Yu Takano; Ikuo Fukuda; Haruki Nakamura
Journal:  J Chem Theory Comput       Date:  2013-11-19       Impact factor: 6.006

Review 4.  A very high level of crossreactivity is an essential feature of the T-cell receptor.

Authors:  D Mason
Journal:  Immunol Today       Date:  1998-09

5.  Antibody stabilization of peptide-MHC multimers reveals functional T cells bearing extremely low-affinity TCRs.

Authors:  Katie Tungatt; Valentina Bianchi; Michael D Crowther; Wendy E Powell; Andrea J Schauenburg; Andrew Trimby; Marco Donia; John J Miles; Christopher J Holland; David K Cole; Andrew J Godkin; Mark Peakman; Per Thor Straten; Inge Marie Svane; Andrew K Sewell; Garry Dolton
Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  2014-12-01       Impact factor: 5.422

6.  Structural basis for the killing of human beta cells by CD8(+) T cells in type 1 diabetes.

Authors:  Anna M Bulek; David K Cole; Ania Skowera; Garry Dolton; Stephanie Gras; Florian Madura; Anna Fuller; John J Miles; Emma Gostick; David A Price; Jan W Drijfhout; Robin R Knight; Guo C Huang; Nikolai Lissin; Peter E Molloy; Linda Wooldridge; Bent K Jakobsen; Jamie Rossjohn; Mark Peakman; Pierre J Rizkallah; Andrew K Sewell
Journal:  Nat Immunol       Date:  2012-01-15       Impact factor: 25.606

7.  T-cell libraries allow simple parallel generation of multiple peptide-specific human T-cell clones.

Authors:  Sarah M Theaker; Cristina Rius; Alexander Greenshields-Watson; Angharad Lloyd; Andrew Trimby; Anna Fuller; John J Miles; David K Cole; Mark Peakman; Andrew K Sewell; Garry Dolton
Journal:  J Immunol Methods       Date:  2016-01-28       Impact factor: 2.303

8.  Identification of human viral protein-derived ligands recognized by individual MHCI-restricted T-cell receptors.

Authors:  Barbara Szomolay; Jie Liu; Paul E Brown; John J Miles; Mathew Clement; Sian Llewellyn-Lacey; Garry Dolton; Julia Ekeruche-Makinde; Anya Lissina; Andrea J Schauenburg; Andrew K Sewell; Scott R Burrows; Mario Roederer; David A Price; Linda Wooldridge; Hugo A van den Berg
Journal:  Immunol Cell Biol       Date:  2016-02-05       Impact factor: 5.126

9.  Molecular mimicry in T cell-mediated autoimmunity: viral peptides activate human T cell clones specific for myelin basic protein.

Authors:  K W Wucherpfennig; J L Strominger
Journal:  Cell       Date:  1995-03-10       Impact factor: 41.582

Review 10.  Why must T cells be cross-reactive?

Authors:  Andrew K Sewell
Journal:  Nat Rev Immunol       Date:  2012-09       Impact factor: 53.106

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  3 in total

Review 1.  Engineering the T cell receptor for fun and profit: Uncovering complex biology, interrogating the immune system, and targeting disease.

Authors:  Aaron M Rosenberg; Brian M Baker
Journal:  Curr Opin Struct Biol       Date:  2022-03-25       Impact factor: 7.786

2.  Proteasome-Generated cis-Spliced Peptides and Their Potential Role in CD8+ T Cell Tolerance.

Authors:  Artem Mansurkhodzhaev; Camila R R Barbosa; Michele Mishto; Juliane Liepe
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2021-02-24       Impact factor: 7.561

3.  Potential Mimicry of Viral and Pancreatic β Cell Antigens Through Non-Spliced and cis-Spliced Zwitter Epitope Candidates in Type 1 Diabetes.

Authors:  Michele Mishto; Artem Mansurkhodzhaev; Teresa Rodriguez-Calvo; Juliane Liepe
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2021-04-15       Impact factor: 7.561

  3 in total

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