Efforts are being made worldwide to understand the immune response to SARS-CoV-2, the virus responsible for the COVID-19 pandemic, including the impact of T cell immunity and cross-recognition with seasonal coronaviruses. Screening SARS-CoV-2 peptide pools revealed that the nucleocapsid (N) protein induced an immunodominant response in HLA-B7 + COVID-19-recovered individuals that was also detectable in unexposed donors. A single N-encoded epitope that was highly conserved across circulating coronaviruses drove this immunodominant response. In vitro peptide stimulation and crystal structure analyses revealed T cell-mediated cross-reactivity towards circulating OC43 and HKU-1 beta coronaviruses, but not 229E or NL63 alpha coronaviruses, due to different peptide conformations. TCR sequencing indicated cross-reactivity was driven by private T cell receptor repertoires with a bias for TRBV27 and a long CDR3β loop. Together, our findings demonstrate the basis of selective T cell cross-reactivity towards an immunodominant SARS-CoV-2 epitope and its homologues from seasonal coronaviruses, suggesting long-lived protective immunity.
Role of the funding source:The funders of the study had no role in the study design, data collection, data analysis, data interpretation, or the writing of the manuscript. The corresponding authors had full access to all the data in the study and had final responsibility for the decision to submit for publication. Conflict of interest: MPP has received consulting fees and research funding from Atara Biotherapeutics and is a member of the Neurology Clinical Advisory Panel of Atara Biotherapeutics. CS has received consulting fees from Atara Biotherapeutics. SB is a member of the advisory boards of Roche, Sanofi Genzyme, Merck, and Teva. KAG has received personal fees from Roche and travel support from Sanofi Aventis. AS has received educational and travel support from Merck Serono Australia. KDH is a member of the advisory boards of Merck Serono Australia, Biogen Australia, and Roche Australia. BTA is an employee of, and owns equity shares in, Atara Biotherapeutics. SRB has received a license fee payment from Atara Biotherapeutics. AC has received a consulting fee from Sanofi Genzyme. RK is a consultant and member of the scientific advisory board of Atara Biotherapeutics and has received a license fee payment and research funding from Atara Biotherapeutics.
Fluorochrome-conjugated peptide–major histocompatibility complex (pMHC) multimers are widely used for flow cytometric visualization of antigen-specific T cells. The most common multimers, streptavidin–biotin-based ‘tetramers’, can be manufactured readily in the laboratory. Unfortunately, there are large differences between the threshold of T cell receptor (TCR) affinity required to capture pMHC tetramers from solution and that which is required for T cell activation. This disparity means that tetramers sometimes fail to stain antigen-specific T cells within a sample, an issue that is particularly problematic when staining tumour-specific, autoimmune or MHC class II-restricted T cells, which often display TCRs of low affinity for pMHC. Here, we compared optimized staining with tetramers and dextramers (dextran-based multimers), with the latter carrying greater numbers of both pMHC and fluorochrome per molecule. Most notably, we find that: (i) dextramers stain more brightly than tetramers; (ii) dextramers outperform tetramers when TCR–pMHC affinity is low; (iii) dextramers outperform tetramers with pMHC class II reagents where there is an absence of co-receptor stabilization; and (iv) dextramer sensitivity is enhanced further by specific protein kinase inhibition. Dextramers are compatible with current state-of-the-art flow cytometry platforms and will probably find particular utility in the fields of autoimmunity and cancer immunology.
In comparison to human leukocyte antigen (HLA) polymorphism, the impact of allelic sequence variation within T cell receptor (TCR) loci is much less understood. Particular TCR loci have been associated with autoimmunity, but the molecular basis for this phenomenon is undefined. We examined the T cell response to an HLA-B*3501–restricted epitope (HPVGEADYFEY) from Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), which is frequently dominated by a TRBV9*01+ public TCR (TK3). However, the common allelic variant TRBV9*02, which differs by a single amino acid near the CDR2β loop (Gln55→His55), was never used in this response. The structure of the TK3 TCR, its allelic variant, and a nonnaturally occurring mutant (Gln55→Ala55) in complex with HLA-B*3501HPVGEADYFEY revealed that the Gln55→His55 polymorphism affected the charge complementarity at the TCR–peptide-MHC interface, resulting in reduced functional recognition of the cognate and naturally occurring variants of this EBV peptide. Thus, polymorphism in the TCR loci may contribute toward variability in immune responses and the outcome of infection.
To follow the fate of CD8+ T cells responsive to Plasmodium berghei ANKA (PbA) infection, we generated an MHC I-restricted TCR transgenic mouse line against this pathogen. T cells from this line, termed PbT-I T cells, were able to respond to blood-stage infection by PbA and two other rodent malaria species, P. yoelii XNL and P. chabaudi AS. These PbT-I T cells were also able to respond to sporozoites and to protect mice from liver-stage infection. Examination of the requirements for priming after intravenous administration of irradiated sporozoites, an effective vaccination approach, showed that the spleen rather than the liver was the main site of priming and that responses depended on CD8α+ dendritic cells. Importantly, sequential exposure to irradiated sporozoites followed two days later by blood-stage infection led to augmented PbT-I T cell expansion. These findings indicate that PbT-I T cells are a highly versatile tool for studying multiple stages and species of rodent malaria and suggest that cross-stage reactive CD8+ T cells may be utilized in liver-stage vaccine design to enable boosting by blood-stage infections.
The data presented here demonstrate for the first time the clinical safety of CMV-specific adoptive T-cell therapy and its potential therapeutic benefit for SOT patients with recurrent and/or drug-resistant CMV infection or disease.
Class I HLAs generally present peptides of 8–10 aa in length, although it is unclear whether peptide length preferences are affected by HLA polymorphism. In this study, we investigated the CD8+ T cell response to the BZLF1 Ag of EBV, which includes overlapping sequences of different size that nevertheless conform to the binding motif of the large and abundant HLA-B*44 supertype. Whereas HLA-B*18:01+ individuals responded strongly and exclusively to the octamer peptide 173SELEIKRY180, HLA-B*44:03+ individuals responded to the atypically large dodecamer peptide 169EECDSELEIKRY180, which encompasses the octamer peptide. Moreover, the octamer peptide bound more stably to HLA-B*18:01 than did the dodecamer peptide, whereas, conversely, HLA-B*44:03 bound only the longer peptide. Furthermore, crystal structures of these viral peptide–HLA complexes showed that the Ag-binding cleft of HLA-B*18:01 was more ideally suited to bind shorter peptides, whereas HLA-B*44:03 exhibited characteristics that favored the presentation of longer peptides. Mass spectrometric identification of > 1000 naturally presented ligands revealed that HLA-B*18:01 was more biased toward presenting shorter peptides than was HLA-B*44:03. Collectively, these data highlight a mechanism through which polymorphism within an HLA class I supertype can diversify determinant selection and immune responses by varying peptide length preferences.
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