| Literature DB >> 9207000 |
P O Campos-Lima1, V Levitsky, M P Imreh, R Gavioli, M G Masucci.
Abstract
The T cell receptor (TCR) repertoires of cytotoxic responses to the immunodominant and subdominant HLA A11-restricted epitopes in the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) nuclear antigen-4 were investigated in four healthy virus carriers. The response to the subdominant epitope (EBNA4 399-408, designated AVF) was highly restricted with conserved Vbeta usage and identical length and amino acid motifs in the third complementarity-determining regions (CDR3), while a broad repertoire using different combinations of TCR-alpha/beta V and J segments and CDR3 regions was selected by the immunodominant epitope (EBNA4 416-424, designated IVT). Distinct patterns of interaction with the A11-peptide complex were revealed for each AVF- or IVT-specific TCR clonotype by alanine scanning mutagenesis analysis. Blocking of cytotoxic function by antibodies specific for the CD8 coreceptor indicated that, while AVF-specific TCRs are of high affinity, the oligoclonal response to the IVT epitope includes both low- and high-affinity TCRs. Thus, comparison of the memory response to two epitopes derived from the same viral antigen and presented through the same MHC class I allele suggests that immunodominance may correlate with the capacity to maintain a broad TCR repertoire.Entities:
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Year: 1997 PMID: 9207000 PMCID: PMC2198955 DOI: 10.1084/jem.186.1.83
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Med ISSN: 0022-1007 Impact factor: 14.307
Recovery of IVT- and AVF-specific CTL Clones from Polyclonal Cultures of HLA A11–positive Individuals
| Donor | Independent Stimulations | Clones analyzed | Specificity | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IVT | AVF | Other | Noncytotoxic | |||||||||
| BK | 4 | 173 | 109 | 26 | 12 | 26 | ||||||
| CA | 1 | 66 | 48 | 8 | 3 | 7 | ||||||
| ZA | 1 | 115 | 20 | 16 | 4 | 75 | ||||||
| EA | 1 | 75 | 31 | 42 | 0 | 2 | ||||||
| Total % | 429 | 208 (49) | 92 (21) | 19 (4) | 110 (26) | |||||||
CTL cultures were obtained by repeated stimulation of blood lymphocytes with the autologous B95.8 virus transformed LCL as described in Materials and Methods. The presence of IVT- and AVF-specific activity was confirmed by the capacity of the polyclonal culture to lyse HLA A11+ PHA blasts pulsed with 10−9 M of the corresponding synthetic peptides. Cultures from two donors that consistently gave a predominantly IVT-specific response and two donors with equal IVT- and AVF-specific reactivities were cloned by limiting dilution. The EBV specificity and class I restriction of the clones were confirmed by their capacity to lyse appropriate panels of EBV+ and EBV− targets matched through single class I alleles. A11-restricted clones were screened for lysis of peptide pulsed A11+ PHA blasts. Clones with other specificities were whether EBV-specific and restricted through other class I alleles, or exhibited LAK-type cytotoxicity. Synthetic peptides were synthesized by the Merrifield solid phase method, dissolved in DMSO at the concentration of 10−2 M, and further diluted in PBS to obtain the indicated concentrations before the assays. The protein concentration of the DMSO stock solutions was determined by a Biuret assay.
V and J Segments Used by the α and β Chain of AVF- and IVT-specific CTL Clones
| Donor | AVF specific | AVF type | IVT specific | IVT type | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. of clones | AV | AJ | BV | D | BJ | No. of clones | AV | AJ | BV | D | BJ | |||||||||||||||||
| BK | 7 | 1S4 | 21 | 3S1 | 2 | 2S2 | Ic,d,e,f | 2 | 1S2 | 39 | 1S1 | 1 | 1S1 | I | ||||||||||||||
| 2 | 1S1 | 45 | 22S1 | 1 | 2S1 | II | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| 5 | 25S1 | 49 | 21S3 | 1 | 1S2 | III | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| 5 | 21S1 | 38 | 2S1 | 1 | 1S5 | IV | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| CA | 4 | 1S4 | 21 | 3S1 | 2 | 2S2 | Ia,h | 4 | 9S1 | 54 | 6S3 | 1 | 1S4 | V | ||||||||||||||
| ZA | 4 | 1S4 | 21 | 3S1 | 2 | 2S2 | Ib,g | nd | – | – | – | – | – | – | ||||||||||||||
| EA | 4 | 16S1 | 40 | 3S1 | 1 | 2S2 | II | 2 | 28S1 | 53 | 1S1 | 1 | 2S3 | VI | ||||||||||||||
| 1 | 25S1 | 36 | 22S1 | 1 | 1S2 | VII | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2 | 2S1 | 42 | 11S1 | 1 | 2S1 | VIII | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1 | nd | nd | 14S1 | 1 | 1S1 | IX | ||||||||||||||||||||||
TCR α and β chain V and J segment usage was determined by PCR-assisted cDNA amplification and sequencing as described in Materials and Methods. The TCR V gene segments are classified according to the family designation outlined by Arden et al. (30). The AJ genetic elements are assigned according to the nomenclature of Koop et al. (31) and the designation of BJ elements follows that of Toyonaga et al. (32). Subtypes of the AVF type I TCR with different BV(D)BJ junctional sequences (see Fig. 1) are indicated by low case letters. The number of clones expressing identical α and β chains are shown for each TCR type. Messages corresponding to nonproductive rearrangements of the second VA gene were detected in approximately one-sixth of the clones.
Figure 1Nucleotide sequence of the α and β chains V(D)J junctional regions and deduced amino acid sequence. (A) AVF-specific TCRs; (B) IVT-specific TCRs. For each TCR type, the nucleotide sequence and the deduced amino acid sequence in single letter code of the CDR3 equivalent loop, defined according to Chothia et al. (33), is shown putatively supported by two framework branches (FW). Only deviations from the consensus FW sequences are indicated. N nucleotide additions are underlined and TCRBD1 and BD2 germinal sequences are highlighted in bold. The conserved framework Cys residues in position 90 of the Vα and 92 of the Vβ chains are indicated.
Figure 2Fine specificity of the various IVT and AVF-specific TCR types defined by alanine scanning mutagenesis. IVT and AVF-specific CTL clones were tested for lysis of A11+ PHA blasts pulsed with 10−9 and 10−10 M of the indicated peptide analogue. The sequence of the wild-type peptide and the predicted orientation of each residue relative to the A11 groove (20) are indicated above each Ala replacement set. Residues pointing towards the groove are shown below the peptide backbone and residues pointing towards the TCR are shown above. The putative accessory anchors are indicated crossing the backbone. Boxes below each residue indicate the corresponding Ala substituted analogue tested with clones expressing the indicated TCR type (left). When the wild-type residue is shown in the box the corresponding analogue was not tested. White boxes indicate that the analogue was recognized as efficiently as the wild-type peptide at both peptide concentrations, black boxes indicate no recognition at either peptide concentration and gray boxes correspond to at least 50% of the control lysis at a concentration of 10−9 M. Each assay was performed three times and the results obtained with individual clones were highly reproducible. All clones listed in Table 2 were tested. In several cases the screening was performed before the TCR-α/β sequences became available. Later results confirmed the absolute correlation between each TCR type and a given pattern of reactivity.
Figure 3TCR affinity defined by sensitivity to blocking by anti-CD8 antibodies. CTL clones representing various TCR types were tested for lysis of A11+ PHA blasts pulsed with 10−9 M of synthetic peptides with or without addition of the indicated amounts of purified anti-human CD8 mAbs. The bars represent the mean % inhibition of at least three separate tests performed with each individual clone at E/T ratio 5:1. The standard deviations were within 10% of the mean. The percent specific lysis in the absence of antibodies varied between 40–50% and was highly reproducible for each clone. Anti-CD4 antibodies and isotype matched irrelevant antibodies gave no more than 5% inhibition at the highest concentration. CD8 expression was tested in parallel by indirect immunofluorescence and FACS® analysis and showed no significant variations between clones.