Changes to peptide structure, not concentration, contribute to expansion of the lowest avidity cytotoxic T lymphocytes


Autoria(s): Leggatt, Graham R.; Narayan, Sharmal; Fernando, Germain J. P.; Frazer, Ian H.
Contribuinte(s)

Joost J. Oppenheim

Data(s)

01/10/2004

Resumo

The efficient in vitro expansion of antigen-specific CD8(+) cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) for use in adoptive immunotherapy represents an important clinical goal. Furthermore, the avidity of expanded CTL populations often correlates closely with clinical outcome. In our study, high-avidity CTL lines could be expanded ex vivo from an antigen-primed animal using low peptide concentration, and intermediate peptide concentrations favored the generation of lower avidity CTL. Further increases in peptide concentration during culture inhibited the expansion of all peptide-specific CD8(+) cells. In contrast, a single amino acid variant peptide efficiently generated functional CTL populations at high or low peptide concentration, which responded to wild-type epitope with the lowest average avidity seen in this study. We propose that for some peptides, the efficient generation of low-avidity CTL responses will be favored by stimulation with altered peptide rather than high concentrations of wild-type epitope. In addition, some variant peptides designed to have improved binding to major histocompatibility complex class I may reduce rather than enhance the functional avidity for the wild-type peptide of ex vivo-expanded CTL. These observations are relevant to in vitro expansion of CTL for immunotherapy and strategies to elicit regulatory or therapeutic immunity to neo-self-antigen when central tolerance has eliminated high-avidity, cognate T cells.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:72259

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology

Palavras-Chave #Cell Biology #Hematology #Immunology #CTL #Variant Peptides #T Cell Receptors #T Cell Growth #Adoptive Immunotherapy #Immunological Synapse #Protective Immunity #Selective Expansion #Functional Avidity #Viral-infection #Cell #Antigen #Ctl #Tcr #Maturation #C1 #320202 Cellular Immunology #730101 Infectious diseases
Tipo

Journal Article