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Induction of neoantigen-reactive T cells from healthy donors.

Muhammad Ali ,
Zsofia Foldvari ,
Eirini Giannakopoulou ,
Maxi-Lu Böschen ,
Erlend Strønen ,
Weiwen Yang ,
Mireille Toebes ,
Benjamin Schubert ,
Oliver Kohlbacher ,
Ton N Schumacher ,
Johanna Olweus

Abstract

The identification of immunogenic neoantigens and their cognate T cells represents the most crucial and rate-limiting steps in the development of personalized cancer immunotherapies that are based on vaccination or on infusion of T cell receptor (TCR)-engineered T cells. Recent advances in deep-sequencing technologies and in silico prediction algorithms have allowed rapid identification of candidate neoepitopes. However, large-scale validation of putative neoepitopes and the isolation of reactive T cells are challenging because of the limited availablity of patient material and the low frequencies of neoepitope-specific T cells. Here we describe a standardized protocol for the induction of neoepitope-reactive T cells from healthy donor T cell repertoires, unaffected by the potentially immunosuppressive environment of the tumor-bearing host. Monocyte-derived dendritic cells (DCs) transfected with mRNA encoding candidate neoepitopes are used to prime autologous naive CD8+ T cells. Antigen-specific T cells that recognize endogenously processed and presented epitopes are detected using peptide-MHC (pMHC) multimers. Single multimer-positive T cells are sorted for the identification of TCR sequences, after an optional step that includes clonal expansion and functional characterization. The time required to identify neoepitope-specific T cells is 15 d, with an additional 2-4 weeks required for clonal expansion and downstream functional characterization. Identified neoepitopes and corresponding TCRs provide candidates for use in vaccination and TCR-based cancer immunotherapies, and datasets generated by this technology should be useful for improving algorithms to predict immunogenic neoantigens.

More about this publication

Nature protocols

Volume 14
Issue nr. 6
Pages 1926-1943
Publication date 01-06-2019

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1038/s41596-019-0170-6
Europe PubMed Central 31101906
Pubmed 31101906

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