Abstract

Immunotherapy represents an attractive option for the treatment of chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection. The HBV proteins polymerase (Pol) and HBx are of special interest for antigen-specific immunotherapy because they are essential for viral replication and have been associated with viral control (Pol) or are still expressed upon viral DNA integration (HBx). Here, we scored all currently described HBx- and Pol-derived epitope sequences for viral indispensability and conservation across all HBV genotypes. This yielded 7 HBx-derived and 26 Pol-derived reported epitopes with functional association and high conservation. We subsequently predicted novel HLA-binding peptides for 6 HLA supertypes prevalent in HBV-infected patients. Potential epitopes expected to be the least prone to immune escape were subjected to a state-of-the-art in vitro assay to validate their HLA-binding capacity. Using this method, a total of 13 HLA binders derived from HBx and 33 binders from Pol were identified across HLA types. Subsequently, we demonstrated interferon gamma (IFN-γ) production in response to 5 of the novel HBx-derived binders and 17 of the novel Pol-derived binders. In addition, we validated several infrequently described epitopes. Collectively, these results specify a set of highly potent T cell epitopes that represent a valuable resource for future HBV immunotherapy design.IMPORTANCE Multiple HBV-derived T cell epitopes have been reported, which can be useful in a therapeutic vaccination strategy. However, these epitopes are largely restricted to HLA-A*02, which is not dominantly expressed in populations with high HBV prevalence. Thus, current epitopes are falling short in the development of a global immunotherapeutic approach. Therefore, we aimed to identify novel epitopes for 6 HLA supertypes most prevalent in the infected population. Moreover, established epitopes might not all be equally effective as they can be subject to different levels of immune escape. It is therefore important to identify targets that are crucial in viral replication and conserved in the majority of the infected population. Here, we applied a stringent selection procedure to compose a combined overview of existing and novel HBV-derived T cell epitopes most promising for viral eradication. This set of T cell epitopes now lays the basis for the development of globally effective HBV antigen-specific immunotherapies.

Highlights

  • Immunotherapy represents an attractive option for the treatment of chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection

  • From Hepitopes, we extracted all unique epitopes identified in human hosts for HBx (n ϭ 14) and Pol (n ϭ 50) (Fig. 1, left), which were found to be largely HLA-A*02 restricted

  • To rank these epitopes based on conservation, all protein sequences for HBx and Pol were extracted from a large public HBV repository (HBVdb) [50, 51] (Fig. 1, right) and used to compute an overall consensus sequence across viral genotypes

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Summary

Introduction

Immunotherapy represents an attractive option for the treatment of chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection. We applied a stringent selection procedure to compose a combined overview of existing and novel HBV-derived T cell epitopes most promising for viral eradication This set of T cell epitopes lays the basis for the development of globally effective HBV antigen-specific immunotherapies. T cell responses are considered essential for viral clearance but are scarce or exhausted in CHB patients [3,4,5,6,7] Still, they can be boosted or induced via several therapeutic strategies, e.g., vaccination or adoptive transfer of engineered hepatitis B virus (HBV)-specific T cells [8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22]. It is vital to identify non-HLA-A*02-restricted epitopes, especially for HLA types prevalent among Asians and Africans, such as HLA-A*24 or HLA-B*07

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