Immunotherapy is an effective treatment for certain cancer patients. Checkpoint blockade strategies using mAbs directed at CTLA-4 and/or PD1 facilitate CD8 cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL)-mediated destruction of tumors, leading to long-term disease stabilization and even remission in some patients with otherwise incurable disease. However, responders are restricted to a minority of patients who have endogenous CD8 T cells that target their own tumors. Moreover, only limited histological cancer types are blockade responsive. The precise specificities of those CTLs are largely unknown. A systematic vaccine elicitation strategy is required to benefit the majority of patients but a physical detection technique suitable for the challenge of identifying a handful of tumor antigens arising by non-synonymous mutation among 100,000 normal self- peptides bound to the same MHC molecule type is lacking. As a result, genomic or transcriptomic sequencing methods and indirect reverse immunology efforts are used to infer their identity on the tumor cell surface. Unfortunately, such standard T cell function-based methods fail to identify stealth (i.e. non-immunogenic) epitopes arrayed but unrecognized by the natural immune response (false negatives) while yielding many false positive results due to T cell crossreactivities.
In Aim 1, we propose to develop and deploy an ultrasensitive Poisson detection liquid chromatography-data independent acquisition (LC-DIA) mass spectrometry (MS) method for antigen discovery to electronically capture the entire immune peptidome from small numbers of tumor cells (106) retrieved by clinical needle biopsy. In so doing, we can unambiguously identify the relevant epitopes as a focus for vaccine targeting. Our recent studies have shown that the T cell receptor (TCR) is an anisotropic mechanosensor whose exquisite specificity for an antigenic peptide bound to an MHC molecule (pMHC) and sensitivity (several copies per target cell) is revealed by piconewton force application as occurs during immune surveillance in vivo. Yet clinical analysis of human T cell responses is carried out in the absence of force, using high concentrations of peptide (micromolar) for in vitro stimulation that further minimizes specificity. Thus, in Aim 2, we shall develop massively parallel optical tweezer arrays to assess pMHC-TCR bond quality under force using individual T cells from tumors, tissues and/or blood that naturally arise in individuals or are induced through vaccination; conjoint single-cell RNA retrieval for TCR identification and bond lifetime will be incorporated into this platform.
In Aim 3, the importance for protective CTL immunity of precise epitope detection as well as optimal single TCR-pMHC bond lifetime under load shall be proven using in vivo pre-clinical models of viral infection and tumor immunotherapy. These advances have the potential to revolutionize CD8 vaccine development by incisively defining the limited number of targets among the expansive immune peptidome with which to program an effective CTL response.

Public Health Relevance

Development of vaccines to direct cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) to destroy viruses and cancers will impact global health significantly. This proposal establishes new technologies toward that end, elucidating both ways of identifying CTL targets and selecting for high quality CTL.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Type
High Priority, Short Term Project Award (R56)
Project #
1R56AI138489-01
Application #
9548316
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1)
Program Officer
Mallia, Conrad M
Project Start
2017-09-01
Project End
2018-08-31
Budget Start
2017-09-01
Budget End
2018-08-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2017
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Department
Type
DUNS #
076580745
City
Boston
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
02215
Brazin, Kristine N; Mallis, Robert J; Boeszoermenyi, Andras et al. (2018) The T Cell Antigen Receptor ? Transmembrane Domain Coordinates Triggering through Regulation of Bilayer Immersion and CD3 Subunit Associations. Immunity 49:829-841.e6
Feng, Yinnian; Reinherz, Ellis L; Lang, Matthew J (2018) ?? T Cell Receptor Mechanosensing Forces out Serial Engagement. Trends Immunol 39:596-609
Yoshizawa, Akihiro; Bi, Kevin; Keskin, Derin B et al. (2018) TCR-pMHC encounter differentially regulates transcriptomes of tissue-resident CD8 T cells. Eur J Immunol 48:128-150