scholarly journals The HLA Ligandome Comprises a Limited Repertoire of O-GlcNAcylated Antigens Preferentially Associated With HLA-B*07:02

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Soumya Mukherjee ◽  
Alvaro Sanchez-Bernabeu ◽  
Laura C. Demmers ◽  
Wei Wu ◽  
Albert J. R. Heck

Mass-spectrometry based immunopeptidomics has provided unprecedented insights into antigen presentation, not only charting an enormous ligandome of self-antigens, but also cancer neoantigens and peptide antigens harbouring post-translational modifications. Here we concentrate on the latter, focusing on the small subset of HLA Class I peptides (less than 1%) that has been observed to be post-translationally modified (PTM) by a O-linked N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc). Just like neoantigens these modified antigens may have specific immunomodulatory functions. Here we compiled from literature, and a new dataset originating from the JY B cell lymphoblastoid cell line, a concise albeit comprehensive list of O-GlcNAcylated HLA class I peptides. This cumulative list of O-GlcNAcylated HLA peptides were derived from normal and cancerous origin, as well as tissue specimen. Remarkably, the overlap in detected O-GlcNAcylated HLA peptides as well as their source proteins is strikingly high. Most of the O-GlcNAcylated HLA peptides originate from nuclear proteins, notably transcription factors. From this list, we extract that O-GlcNAcylated HLA Class I peptides are preferentially presented by the HLA-B*07:02 allele. This allele loads peptides with a Proline residue anchor at position 2, and features a binding groove that can accommodate well the recently proposed consensus sequence for O-GlcNAcylation, P(V/A/T/S)g(S/T), essentially explaining why HLA-B*07:02 is a favoured binding allele. The observations drawn from the compiled list, may assist in the prediction of novel O-GlcNAcylated HLA antigens, which will be best presented by patients harbouring HLA-B*07:02 or related alleles that use Proline as anchoring residue.

2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (Supplement_6) ◽  
pp. vi120-vi120
Author(s):  
Konstantina Kapolou ◽  
Lena Katharina Freudenmann ◽  
Ekaterina Friebel ◽  
Leon Bichmann ◽  
Burkhard Becher ◽  
...  

Abstract We provide a comprehensive analysis of the antigenic landscape of glioblastoma using a multi-omics approach including ligandome mapping of the Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) ligandome, next generation sequencing (NGS) as well as an in-depth characterization of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) using mass cytometry and ultra-deep sequencing of the T-cell receptor (TCR). Tumor-exclusive HLA class I and class II ligands (immune precipitation and LC-MS/MS) of 24 isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 wild type glioblastoma samples and 10 autologous primary glioblastoma cell lines were defined in comparison to an HLA ligandome normal tissue reference database (n > 418). We found 11,496 glioblastoma exclusive HLA class I ligands (2,064 shared with cell lines; 3,754 on ≥ 2 glioblastoma samples). On the source protein level, 239 glioblastoma exclusive proteins were identified; among them 54 were also found in cell lines. For HLA class II ligands the analysis revealed 11,870 glioblastoma exclusive peptides (444 shared with cell lines; 3,420 on ≥ 2 glioblastoma samples) and 278 glioblastoma exclusive proteins; among which 18 were present also in cell lines. Moreover, whole-exome sequencing and whole RNA sequencing of 13 tumor samples was performed with the aim to predict neoantigens. On average 5,662 somatic missense effects were identified per patient (min: 4,258; max: 7,479). Candidate peptides are grouped into (i) in silico predicted neoepitopes, (ii) tumor-exclusivity on HLA, (iii) gene expression (e.g. cancer testis antigens). Top-ranking candidates from each group will be tested with regards to their immunogenicity in an autologous setting (TIL, peripheral blood mononuclear cells, patient derived tumor cells). Finally, the peptide and immunogenicity data is correlated with the immune phenotype of the TIL compartment as well as the TCR repertoire of the sample.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 4119-4119
Author(s):  
Daniel Johannes Kowalewski ◽  
Heiko Schuster ◽  
Claudia Berlin ◽  
Lothar Kanz ◽  
Helmut R Salih ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 4119 Recurrent disease, selection for chemo resistant clones and inhibition of immune effector functions are limitations of chemotherapeutic treatment of cancer including CLL. This is even more since graft-versus-leukemia effects and remissions after donor lymphocyte infusions have been correlated to long-term CLL free survival. Clonotype analysis of such cases suggested clonally expanded CD8+ T cells that recognize tumor associated antigens (TAAs) presented on HLA (human leukocyte antigen) as mediators of the observed effects, thus making CLL an attractive target for peptide vaccine based immunotherapy. For this goal we established the approach of direct isolation and identification of naturally processed and presented HLA ligands from tissues of interest by affinity chromatography and mass spectrometry. Comparative, semi-quantitative analysis of the HLA ligandomes of malignant and benign samples provided the rationale for selection of potential targets. 42 CLL patients (ages 48–85; median 70 years) of different HLA types and disease stages (Binet A, 24 patients; Binet B, 11 patients; Binet C, 7 patients) were enrolled in this study. Furthermore we collected blood samples from 50 healthy volunteers. HLA class I ligands were isolated from CLL cells as well as benign B cells from healthy donors and unsorted healthy PBMC using a standard affinity chromatography protocol implementing the pan-HLA class I specific antibody W6/32. Liquid chromatography coupled mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) based peptide analysis was performed on an LTQ Orbitrap hybrid mass spectrometer followed by annotation of fragment spectra using the MASCOT search algorithm against the human proteome comprised in the SwissProt database. Spectral counting based analysis provided semi-quantitative information regarding the abundance of HLA ligands and their source proteins in the respective ligandomes. In addition, HLA quantification experiments on the cell surface of CLL cells and autologous healthy B cells were performed using a flow cytometric indirect immunofluorescence assay. For this interim analysis we completely analyzed the HLA ligandomes of 7 CLL patients and 10 healthy controls. In total, we identified more than 15.000 different HLA ligands representing more than 7300 different proteins. This comprised more than 6,500 different ligands from CLL cells representing a total of 4,149 source proteins. Comparative analysis of representation in the HLA ligandomes of CLL cells, healthy B cells and healthy PBMC identified 1741 different source proteins as being exclusively expressed in CLL. Semi-quantitative evaluation revealed 138 of these proteins as being highly expressed on CLL (e.g. SET proto-oncogene, Pim-1 Oncogene, Mucin 1). Flow cytomerty based quantification of surface HLA expression revealed similar amounts of HLA class I (p=0.23, unpaired t-test) and II (p=0.33, unpaired t-test) molecules on CLL cells and autologous benign B lymphocytes, with a trend to higher HLA expression on CLL cells. Taken together, the presented strategy enabled the identification of a vast array of both known and novel TAAs and their corresponding naturally processed and presented HLA ligands in CLL. It pinpointed highly overrepresented TAAs for further analysis and immunogenicity testing. Expansion of the dataset after analysis of all enrolled patients will provide an unprecedented in-depth characterization of the HLA ligandome of CLL for future immunotherapeutic approaches. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 2883-2883
Author(s):  
Ilana Kopolovic ◽  
Jackie Ostro ◽  
Christine Cserti ◽  
Walter Sunny Dzik ◽  
Hidacki Tsubota ◽  
...  

Abstract INTRODUCTION: Transfusion-associated graft-vs-host disease (TA-GVHD) is a rare and often fatal complication of transfusion of cellular blood products. The relative contributions of product and donor factors to the risk of TA-GVHD remain uncertain. METHODS: Systematic review of all reported cases of TA-GVHD in the published literature prior to Oct 2013, without language restrictions. Cases attributed to granulocyte transfusions, passenger lymphocyte syndrome, or GVHD following stem-cell transplant (unless traced to blood components rather than the graft) were excluded. Data collected included patient demographics and health information, details of transfusion event(s) and blood component(s), clinicolaboratory features of the TA-GVHD presentation and outcome, and results of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) and chimerism studies. HLA typing was evaluated where reported for both donor (product) and recipient at either class I or class II loci. Donor/recipient pairs were categorized as D=0 when there were no identified donor HLA antigens foreign to the recipient, or D>0 when donor cells contained one or more HLA antigens not found in the recipient. This classification applied separately to HLA class I and class II loci for each case. RESULTS: After removing duplicates, 2130 citations discovered by the search were examined by two independent reviewers, with 394 identified as publications of interest for complete review. An additional 21 publications were found from the initial review, for a total of 415 publications. Of these, 195 publications described 348 unique cases for inclusion. Component: The component implicated in TA-GVHD was identified in 248 (71%) cases: Red cells (RBC) in 132 (38%); whole blood (WB) in 92 (26%); platelets in 20 (6%); buffy- coat product in 2 (0.6%); and plasma and plasma-reduced blood in one case each. In 100 (29%) cases, the blood component was either not specified or not identified among several potentially responsible components. Storage: Component storage time was reported in 158 (45%) cases. Of these, the implicated product was either described as “fresh” or </=10 days old in 148 (94%). 10 (6%) cases reported a storage time >10 days (maximum 14 days). Related donor: In 63 cases, the donor was either related (n=61) or deliberately HLA-matched (n=2) to the recipient, while in 113 cases the donor was unrelated. The remaining cases either reported a “possible” related donor or did not report the donor-recipient relationship. Leukoreduction/Irradiation: Leukoreduction status was reported in 135 (39%) cases. Of these, the implicated product was leukoreduced in 23 (17%) (10 bedside, 2 pre-storage, 11 not specified). The product was irradiated in 9 cases. HLA: HLA typing of recipient and donor, by serological or molecular techniques, was available for 84 cases (74 cases Class I, 62 Class II). Among patients with HLA data available, 20 (24%) had an underlying diagnosis warranting irradiation by current standards, while 64 (76%) did not. The category of D=0 was found in 47 (64%) of cases with reported class I typing; 44 (71%) of cases with reported class II typing; and 60 (71%) overall (Figure 1). There were 9 cases in which the category of D=0 could be ruled out for both HLA I and II. In the remaining 15 cases, the category of D=0 at either HLA I or II could not be definitively ruled in or out based on reported data. When considering those in whom the presence or absence of D=0 could be definitely determined, while D=0 at either HLA class I or class II was present in 55 of 57 (96%) of recipients without an indication for blood component irradiation, D=0 was present in only 5 of 12 (42%) of recipients with an indication for irradiation, p< 0.0001 (Table 1). CONCLUSIONS: The most common components implicated in TA-GVHD were WB and RBC. Most units were non-leukoreduced and stored for <10 days. Most cases of TA-GVHD occurred in recipients without a standard indication for irradiation. The absence of a foreign donor antigen at either HLA class I or class II occurred in a large majority of cases and was significantly more common in TA-GVHD among recipients without an indication for irradiation compared with those in whom irradiation would be indicated, suggesting that this donor-recipient relationship is the predominant risk factor in the development of TA-GVHD. Policies for irradiating cellular blood components based solely on the diagnosis of the recipient may fail to address all relevant risk factors for TA-GVHD. Figure 1 Figure 1. Table 1. Table 1. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


1987 ◽  
Vol 55 (2) ◽  
pp. 125-130 ◽  
Author(s):  
HF van den Ingh ◽  
DJ Ruiter ◽  
G Griffioen ◽  
GNP van Muijen ◽  
S Ferrone

2005 ◽  
Vol 201 (6) ◽  
pp. 891-902 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alasdair Leslie ◽  
Daniel Kavanagh ◽  
Isobella Honeyborne ◽  
Katja Pfafferott ◽  
Charles Edwards ◽  
...  

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 amino acid sequence polymorphisms associated with expression of specific human histocompatibility leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I alleles suggest sites of cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL)-mediated selection pressure and immune escape. The associations most frequently observed are between expression of an HLA class I molecule and variation from the consensus sequence. However, a substantial number of sites have been identified in which particular HLA class I allele expression is associated with preservation of the consensus sequence. The mechanism behind this is so far unexplained. The current studies, focusing on two examples of “negatively associated” or apparently preserved epitopes, suggest an explanation for this phenomenon: negative associations can arise as a result of positive selection of an escape mutation, which is stable on transmission and therefore accumulates in the population to the point at which it defines the consensus sequence. Such negative associations may only be in evidence transiently, because the statistical power to detect them diminishes as the mutations accumulate. If an escape variant reaches fixation in the population, the epitope will be lost as a potential target to the immune system. These data help to explain how HIV is evolving at a population level. Understanding the direction of HIV evolution has important implications for vaccine development.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (19) ◽  
pp. 10503
Author(s):  
Elena Lorente ◽  
Miguel Marcilla ◽  
Patricia G. de la Sota ◽  
Adriana Quijada-Freire ◽  
Carmen Mir ◽  
...  

Identification of a natural human leukocyte antigen (HLA) ligandome is a key element to understand the cellular immune response. Advanced high throughput mass spectrometry analyses identify a relevant, but not complete, fraction of the many tens of thousands of self-peptides generated by antigen processing in live cells. In infected cells, in addition to this complex HLA ligandome, a minority of peptides from degradation of the few proteins encoded by the viral genome are also bound to HLA class I molecules. In this study, the standard immunopeptidomics strategy was modified to include the classical acid stripping treatment after virus infection to enrich the HLA ligandome in virus ligands. Complexes of HLA-B*27:05-bound peptide pools were isolated from vaccinia virus (VACV)-infected cells treated with acid stripping after virus infection. The HLA class I ligandome was identified using high throughput mass spectrometry analyses, yielding 37 and 51 natural peptides processed and presented untreated and after acid stripping treatment VACV-infected human cells, respectively. Most of these virus ligands were identified in both conditions, but exclusive VACV ligands detected by mass spectrometry detected on acid stripping treatment doubled the number of those identified in the untreated VACV-infected condition. Theoretical binding affinity prediction of the VACV HLA-B*27:05 ligands and acute antiviral T cell response characterization in the HLA transgenic mice model showed no differences between HLA ligands identified under the two conditions: untreated and under acid stripping condition. These findings indicated that acid stripping treatment could be useful to identify HLA class I ligands from virus-infected cells.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liseanne J. van ‘t Hof ◽  
Naomi Schotvanger ◽  
Geert W. Haasnoot ◽  
Carin van der Keur ◽  
Dave L. Roelen ◽  
...  

IntroductionIn pregnancy, the mother and fetus differ in HLA antigens, and yet the maternal immune system generally tolerates the fetus. KIR receptors expressed by maternal uterine NK cells at the maternal-fetal interface directly interact with HLA-C on extravillous trophoblast cells for optimal placental development. In this study, we aimed to determine whether there is a preferential selection for HLA compatibility and specific KIR/HLA-C combinations in uncomplicated and preeclamptic naturally conceived pregnancies compared to what would be expected by chance.MethodsGenotyping for maternal and fetal HLA-A, -B, -C, -DR, and -DQ, and maternal KIR was performed for 451 uncomplicated pregnancies and 77 pregnancies complicated with preeclampsia. The number of HLA antigen (mis)matches between mother and fetus was calculated and compared to expected values obtained by randomization of the HLA haplotype, inherited from the father, over the existing maternal haplotype of the fetuses. A similar methodology was executed for analysis of the KIR/HLA-C data (n=309).ResultsIn uncomplicated pregnancies, the degree of maternal-fetal HLA matching was not different than expected-by-chance values. In preeclamptic pregnancies, the degree of maternal-fetal HLA matching was different in observed compared to expected-by-chance values (p=0.012). More specifically, the degree of maternal-fetal matching of HLA-C was higher in the actual preeclamptic pregnancies than was expected-by-chance (p=0.007). Preeclamptic pregnancies showed an overall tendency towards higher maternal-fetal HLA compatibility, for total HLA matches (p=0.021), HLA class I (p=0.038) and HLA-C (p=0.025) compared to uncomplicated pregnancies.ConclusionThe data suggest that there is no preferential selection of maternal-fetal HLA compatibility in uncomplicated pregnancies. In contrast, increased total HLA, HLA class I and, especially, HLA-C compatibility is associated with preeclampsia, suggestive for a role of HLA mismatches in immune regulation leading to uncomplicated pregnancy.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Curtis McMurtrey ◽  
Thomas Trolle ◽  
Tiffany Sansom ◽  
Soumya G Remesh ◽  
Thomas Kaever ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 4518-4518 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel J. Kowalewski ◽  
Mirle Schemionek ◽  
Lothar Kanz ◽  
Helmut R. Salih ◽  
Tim H. Brümmendorf ◽  
...  

Abstract Despite the success of targeted therapy with tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs), chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) remains largely incurable. Immunotherapy, and in particular multi-peptide vaccination, may be a promising approach to eliminate residual CML cells. As of now, a multitude of potential vaccine targets have been proposed based on reverse immunology and functional genomic approaches focusing either on BCR-ABL junction peptides, which represent CML-specific neo-antigens, or on aberrantly expressed self-proteins such as WT-1, PR and hTERT. However, the results of clinical studies employing such antigens have so far not been encouraging. This might in part be due to the inherent limitations of the above mentioned approaches: evidence of natural presentation of the predicted epitopes is lacking and the correlation of transcript abundance and HLA restricted presentation of the corresponding gene product has been shown to be skewed. Modern mass spectrometry, on the other hand, enables the comprehensive analysis of the entirety of naturally presented HLA ligands on tissues of interest, termed the HLA ligandome. Here we implemented this direct approach and comparatively mapped the HLA ligandome landscape of 16 primary CML samples and 40 healthy volunteer (HV) controls (30 blood and 10 bone marrow samples). We identified more than 30,000 different naturally presented HLA class I ligands representing ~10,000 source proteins. Regression analysis suggests source protein identifications on CML (4,337 different proteins) to attain >95% of maximum achievable coverage with the implemented analytical setup. Based on this extensive dataset, we investigated the HLA restricted presentation of established CML-associated/specific antigens and applied a novel approach defining tumor-associated antigens strictly based on exclusive and frequent representation in CML ligandomes. Strikingly, we found the vast majority of previously described antigens including wild-type BCR protein (6% CML, 5% HV), Myeloperoxidase (56% CML, 15% HV) and Proteinase 3 (38% CML, 11% HV) to be (also) represented on normal PBMC or BMNC. No evidence of naturally presented BCR-ABL junction peptides was found. However, we identified a panel of 7 LiTAAs (ligandome-derived tumor-associated antigens) represented by 16 different HLA ligands, showing CML-exclusive representation in ≥25% of CML patient ligandomes. As CD4+ T cells mediate important indirect and direct effects in anti-tumor immunity, we further applied our approach to HLA class II ligandomes of 15 CML patients and 18 HV (13 blood and 5 bone marrow samples), identifying more than 9,000 different naturally presented HLA class II ligands (1,900 source proteins). Applying the same antigen-ranking strategy as described for HLA class I, we identified 7 additional HLA class II LiTAAs represented by 50 corresponding LiTAPs (ligandome-derived tumor-associated peptides). Overlap analysis of CML-exclusive source proteins revealed 6 proteins to be represented both in HLA class I and II ligandomes. Notably, for Galectin-1, which shows CML-exclusive representation in 19% of HLA class I and 13% of HLA class II ligandomes, one of the HLA class II ligands was found to contain a complete, embedded HLA class I peptide. Such naturally presented embedded HLA ligands might present optimal vaccine candidates that are recognized by both, CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. Functional analysis of the here defined HLA class I and II LiTAPs with regard to induction of T cell responses is presently ongoing and serves to validate them as prime targets for the development of an off-the-shelf peptide vaccination in CML patients. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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