Abstract

Checkpoint inhibitors, cancer vaccines, and adoptive cell therapy exploit T cell mediated immune responses to cancers. Discovering the exact antigens targeted by T cell responses is important for their efficacy. Antigen discovery for ‘orphan’ T cells or TCRs has been a challenging prospect due to high number of possible pMHC specificities. Several current approaches to decipher antigen specificities require prior knowledge of antigen sequences, are unable to scale up, or require production of soluble TCRs. To overcome these drawbacks, we have developed chimeric receptors called Signaling and Antigen-presenting Bifunctional Receptors (SABRs) that allow identification of antigen-presenting cells. SABRs present display pMHC on their extracellular domain, which is recognized by an orphan TCR. Upon recognition, SABRs initiate signaling in the presenting cell using a CD3zeta signaling domain. We transduced reporter cells with SABRs presenting HLA-A2-restricted epitopes from MelanA and NY-ESO-1, and co-incubated them with target cells expressing their cognate TCRs, which resulted in signal transduction only upon correct pMHC-TCR pairing, allowing the presenting cells to express GFP. Second, we showed that SABRs displaying independently expressed peptide and MHC could function similarly. These receptors could present pulsed peptides or endogenously expressed proteins, allowing the uncoupling of peptide and MHC, while retaining their signaling capability. We are currently testing the use of SABR-based antigen libraries to identify novel antigenic specificities targeted by T cells in cancers, infectious diseases, and autoimmune diseases.

Highlights

  • IntroductionBy virtue of genetically linking the peptide epitope with MHC, SABRs can be used to present a defined antigen and to report its successful recognition by a TCR

  • We sought to develop novel antigen discovery techniques to address the unmet need

  • We describe the use of chimeric receptors called Signaling and Antigen-presenting Bifunctional Receptors \(SABRs) in a novel cell-based platform for T Cell Receptor \(TCR) antigen discovery

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Summary

Introduction

By virtue of genetically linking the peptide epitope with MHC, SABRs can be used to present a defined antigen and to report its successful recognition by a TCR. We asked if SABR libraries presenting a large number of epitopes can be used to screen successful TCR-pMHC interactions. The SABR libraries were packaged into lentiviral vectors and used to transduce NFAT-GFP-Jurkat cells. NFAT-GFP-Jurkat cells expressing the SABR library were co-cultured with Jurkat cells expressing an ‘orphan’ TCR. The top ranked epitopes were putative antigens for that TCR and are subsequently validated by constructing individual SABRs presenting each of the epitopes and measuring GFP expression in co-culture assays. 1. Starting with a list of desired peptides to express in a SABR library, generate back-translated nucleotide sequences with the IDT Codon Optimization Tool. Append nucleotide sequences for cloning into a BsmBI digested backbone to the back-translated epitope sequences "CAGGAGGGCTCGGCA" + + "GGATGCGGAGGGTCC"

Append random nucleotides to the end of the epitope oligo for normalization
First backbone digest
Second backbone digest
Gel purify backbone
Amplify library oligos
11. Ligation
50. Stain cells
52. Verify on FACS
55. Amplicon PCR
60. Generate bwa index
64. Count library peptide hits
Anticipated Results
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