| Literature DB >> 34919442 |
Michael J Moore1, Maggie Zhong1, Johanna Hansen1, Hans Gartner1, Craig Grant1, Mei Huang1, Faith M Harris1, Naxin Tu1, Natalie A Bowerman1, Kurt H Edelmann1, Thomas Barry1, Olivier Herbin1, Chin-Siean Tay1, David J DiLillo1, Corinne E Decker1, Natasha Levenkova1, James Shevchuk1, Ankur Dhanik1, Karoline A Meagher1, Amanda Karr1, Jan Roos1, Wen-Yi Lee1, David Suh1, Mark Eckersdorff1, T Craig Meagher1, Matthew Koss1, Lakeisha Esau1, Matthew A Sleeman1, Robert Babb1, Gang Chen1, Christos A Kyratsous1, William T Poueymirou1, John R McWhirter1, Vera A Voronina1, Chunguang Guo1, Cagan Gurer1, George D Yancopoulos1, Andrew J Murphy1, Lynn E Macdonald1.
Abstract
Despite the enormous promise of T cell therapies, the isolation and study of human T cell receptors (TCRs) of dedicated specificity remains a major challenge. To overcome this limitation, we generated mice with a genetically humanized system of T cell immunity. We used VelociGene technology to replace the murine TCRαβ variable regions, along with regions encoding the extracellular domains of co-receptors CD4 and CD8, and major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I and II, with corresponding human sequences. The resulting “VelociT” mice have normal myeloid and lymphoid immune cell populations, including thymic and peripheral αβ T cell subsets comparable with wild-type mice. VelociT mice expressed a diverse TCR repertoire, mounted functional T cell responses to lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus infection, and could develop experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. Immunization of VelociT mice with human tumor-associated peptide antigens generated robust, antigen-specific responses and led to identification of a TCR against tumor antigen New York esophageal squamous cell carcinoma-1 with potent antitumor activity. These studies demonstrate that VelociT mice mount clinically relevant T cell responses to both MHC-I– and MHC-II–restricted antigens, providing a powerful new model for analyzing T cell function in human disease. Moreover, VelociT mice are a new platform for de novo discovery of therapeutic human TCRs.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34919442 DOI: 10.1126/sciimmunol.abj4026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Immunol ISSN: 2470-9468