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1.
An important step in the design of subunit vaccines is the identification of promiscuous T helper cell epitopes in sets of disease-specific gene products. Most of the epitope prediction models are based on HLA-II peptide binding, which constitutes a major bottleneck in the natural selection of epitopes. Here we describe a computer model, TEPITOPE, that enables the systematic prediction of promiscuous peptide ligands for a broad range of HLA binding specificity. We show how to apply the TEPITOPE prediction model to identify T-cell epitopes, and provide examples of its successful application in the context of oncology, allergy, and infectious and autoimmune diseases.  相似文献   

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One of the major drawbacks limiting the use of synthetic peptide vaccines in genetically distinct populations is the fact that different epitopes are recognized by T cells from individuals displaying distinct major histocompatibility complex molecules. Immunization of mice with peptide (181-195) from the immunodominant 43 kDa glycoprotein of Paracoccidioides brasiliensis (gp43), the causative agent of Paracoccidioidomycosis (PCM), conferred protection against infectious challenge by the fungus. To identify immunodominant and potentially protective human T-cell epitopes in gp43, we used the TEPITOPE algorithm to select peptide sequences that would most likely bind multiple HLA-DR molecules and tested their recognition by T cells from sensitized individuals. The 5 most promiscuous peptides were selected from the gp43 sequence and the actual promiscuity of HLA binding was assessed by direct binding assays to 9 prevalent HLA-DR molecules. Synthetic peptides were tested in proliferation assays with peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from PCM patients after chemotherapy and healthy controls. PBMC from 14 of 19 patients recognized at least one of the promiscuous peptides, whereas none of the healthy controls recognized the gp43 promiscuous peptides. Peptide gp43(180-194) was recognized by 53% of patients, whereas the other promiscuous gp43 peptides were recognized by 32% to 47% of patients. The frequency of peptide binding and peptide recognition correlated with the promiscuity of HLA-DR binding, as determined by TEPITOPE analysis. In silico prediction of promiscuous epitopes led to the identification of naturally immunodominant epitopes recognized by PBMC from a significant proportion of a genetically heterogeneous patient population exposed to P. brasiliensis. The combination of several such epitopes may increase the frequency of positive responses and allow the immunization of genetically distinct populations.  相似文献   

5.

Background

The immune system must detect a wide variety of microbial pathogens, such as viruses, bacteria, fungi and parasitic worms, to protect the host against disease. Antigenic peptides displayed by MHC II (class II Major Histocompatibility Complex) molecules is a pivotal process to activate CD4+ TH cells (Helper T cells). The activated TH cells can differentiate into effector cells which assist various cells in activating against pathogen invasion. Each MHC locus encodes a great number of allele variants. Yet this limited number of MHC molecules are required to display enormous number of antigenic peptides. Since the peptide binding measurements of MHC molecules by biochemical experiments are expensive, only a few of the MHC molecules have suffecient measured peptides. To perform accurate binding prediction for those MHC alleles without suffecient measured peptides, a number of computational algorithms were proposed in the last decades.

Results

Here, we propose a new MHC II binding prediction approach, OWA-PSSM, which is a significantly extended version of a well known method called TEPITOPE. The TEPITOPE method is able to perform prediction for only 50 MHC alleles, while OWA-PSSM is able to perform prediction for much more, up to 879 HLA-DR molecules. We evaluate the method on five benchmark datasets. The method is demonstrated to be the best one in identifying binding cores compared with several other popular state-of-the-art approaches. Meanwhile, the method performs comparably to the TEPITOPE and NetMHCIIpan2.0 approaches in identifying HLA-DR epitopes and ligands, and it performs significantly better than TEPITOPEpan in the identification of HLA-DR ligands and MultiRTA in identifying HLA-DR T cell epitopes.

Conclusions

The proposed approach OWA-PSSM is fast and robust in identifying ligands, epitopes and binding cores for up to 879 MHC II molecules.
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6.
The melanoma-associated Ag glycoprotein 100 was analyzed by the T cell epitope prediction software TEPITOPE. Seven HLA-DR promiscuous peptides predicted with a stringent threshold were used to load dendritic cells (DC), and induction of a proliferative response was monitored. PBMC of all nine donors including two patients with malignant melanoma responded to at least one of the peptides. The proliferative response was defined as a Th response by the selective expansion of CD4(+) cells, up-regulation of CD25 and CD40L, and IL-2 and IFN-gamma expression. Peptide-loaded DC also initiated a T helper response in vivo (i.e., tumor growth in the SCID mouse was significantly retarded by the transfer of PBMC together with peptide-loaded DC). Because the use of the TEPITOPE program allows for a prediction of T cell epitopes; because the predicted peptides can be rapidly confirmed by inducing a Th response in the individual patient; and because application of peptide-loaded DC suffices for the in vivo activation of helper cells, vaccination with MHC class II-binding peptides of tumor-associated Ags becomes a feasible and likely powerful tool in the immunotherapy of cancer.  相似文献   

7.

Background

The binding of peptide fragments of antigens to class II MHC is a crucial step in initiating a helper T cell immune response. The identification of such peptide epitopes has potential applications in vaccine design and in better understanding autoimmune diseases and allergies. However, comprehensive experimental determination of peptide-MHC binding affinities is infeasible due to MHC diversity and the large number of possible peptide sequences. Computational methods trained on the limited experimental binding data can address this challenge. We present the MultiRTA method, an extension of our previous single-type RTA prediction method, which allows the prediction of peptide binding affinities for multiple MHC allotypes not used to train the model. Thus predictions can be made for many MHC allotypes for which experimental binding data is unavailable.

Results

We fit MultiRTA models for both HLA-DR and HLA-DP using large experimental binding data sets. The performance in predicting binding affinities for novel MHC allotypes, not in the training set, was tested in two different ways. First, we performed leave-one-allele-out cross-validation, in which predictions are made for one allotype using a model fit to binding data for the remaining MHC allotypes. Comparison of the HLA-DR results with those of two other prediction methods applied to the same data sets showed that MultiRTA achieved performance comparable to NetMHCIIpan and better than the earlier TEPITOPE method. We also directly tested model transferability by making leave-one-allele-out predictions for additional experimentally characterized sets of overlapping peptide epitopes binding to multiple MHC allotypes. In addition, we determined the applicability of prediction methods like MultiRTA to other MHC allotypes by examining the degree of MHC variation accounted for in the training set. An examination of predictions for the promiscuous binding CLIP peptide revealed variations in binding affinity among alleles as well as potentially distinct binding registers for HLA-DR and HLA-DP. Finally, we analyzed the optimal MultiRTA parameters to discover the most important peptide residues for promiscuous and allele-specific binding to HLA-DR and HLA-DP allotypes.

Conclusions

The MultiRTA method yields competitive performance but with a significantly simpler and physically interpretable model compared with previous prediction methods. A MultiRTA prediction webserver is available at http://bordnerlab.org/MultiRTA.
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8.
CD4 positive T helper cells control many aspects of specific immunity. These cells are specific for peptides derived from protein antigens and presented by molecules of the extremely polymorphic major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II system. The identification of peptides that bind to MHC class II molecules is therefore of pivotal importance for rational discovery of immune epitopes. HLA-DR is a prominent example of a human MHC class II. Here, we present a method, NetMHCIIpan, that allows for pan-specific predictions of peptide binding to any HLA-DR molecule of known sequence. The method is derived from a large compilation of quantitative HLA-DR binding events covering 14 of the more than 500 known HLA-DR alleles. Taking both peptide and HLA sequence information into account, the method can generalize and predict peptide binding also for HLA-DR molecules where experimental data is absent. Validation of the method includes identification of endogenously derived HLA class II ligands, cross-validation, leave-one-molecule-out, and binding motif identification for hitherto uncharacterized HLA-DR molecules. The validation shows that the method can successfully predict binding for HLA-DR molecules-even in the absence of specific data for the particular molecule in question. Moreover, when compared to TEPITOPE, currently the only other publicly available prediction method aiming at providing broad HLA-DR allelic coverage, NetMHCIIpan performs equivalently for alleles included in the training of TEPITOPE while outperforming TEPITOPE on novel alleles. We propose that the method can be used to identify those hitherto uncharacterized alleles, which should be addressed experimentally in future updates of the method to cover the polymorphism of HLA-DR most efficiently. We thus conclude that the presented method meets the challenge of keeping up with the MHC polymorphism discovery rate and that it can be used to sample the MHC "space," enabling a highly efficient iterative process for improving MHC class II binding predictions.  相似文献   

9.
Most pockets in the human leukocyte antigen-group DR (HLA-DR) groove are shaped by clusters of polymorphic residues and, thus, have distinct chemical and size characteristics in different HLA-DR alleles. Each HLA-DR pocket can be characterized by "pocket profiles," a quantitative representation of the interaction of all natural amino acid residues with a given pocket. In this report we demonstrate that pocket profiles are nearly independent of the remaining HLA-DR cleft. A small database of profiles was sufficient to generate a large number of HLA-DR matrices, representing the majority of human HLA-DR peptide-binding specificity. These virtual matrices were incorporated in software (TEPITOPE) capable of predicting promiscuous HLA class II ligands. This software, in combination with DNA microarray technology, has provided a new tool for the generation of comprehensive databases of candidate promiscuous T-cell epitopes in human disease tissues. First, DNA microarrays are used to reveal genes that are specifically expressed or upregulated in disease tissues. Second, the prediction software enables the scanning of these genes for promiscuous HLA-DR binding sites. In an example, we demonstrate that starting from nearly 20,000 genes, a database of candidate colon cancer-specific and promiscuous T-cell epitopes could be fully populated within a matter of days. Our approach has implications for the development of epitope-based vaccines.  相似文献   

10.
Leishmaniases are vector-borne diseases for which no vaccine exists. These diseases are caused by the Leishmania species complex. Activation of the CD8+ T cell is crucial for protection against intracellular pathogens, and peptide antigens are attractive strategies for the precise activation of CD8+ T in vaccine development against intracellular infections. The traditional approach to mine the epitopes is an arduous task. However, with the advent of immunoinformatics, in silico epitope prediction tools are available to expedite epitope identification. In this study, we employ different immunoinformatics tools to predict CD8+ T cell specific 9 mer epitopes presented by HLA-A*02 and HLA-B40 within the highly conserved 3′-ectonucleotidase of Leishmania donovani. We identify five promiscuous epitopes, which have no homologs in humans, theoretically cover 85% of the world's population and are highly conserved (100%) among Leishmania species. Presentation of selected peptides was confirmed by T2 cell line based HLA-stabilization assay, and three of them were found to be strong binders. The in vitro peptide stimulation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from cured HLA-A02+ visceral leishmaniasis (VL) subjects produced significantly higher IFN-γ, IL-2 and IL-12 compared to no peptide control healthy subjects. Further, CD8+ cells from treated VL subjects produced significantly higher intracellular IFN-γ, lymphocyte proliferation and cytotoxic activity against selected peptides from the PBMCs of treated HLA-A02+ VL subjects. Thus, the CD8+ T cell specific epitopes shown in this study will speed up the development of polytope vaccines for leishmaniasis.  相似文献   

11.

Background  

The binding of peptide fragments of antigens to class II MHC is a crucial step in initiating a helper T cell immune response. The identification of such peptide epitopes has potential applications in vaccine design and in better understanding autoimmune diseases and allergies. However, comprehensive experimental determination of peptide-MHC binding affinities is infeasible due to MHC diversity and the large number of possible peptide sequences. Computational methods trained on the limited experimental binding data can address this challenge. We present the MultiRTA method, an extension of our previous single-type RTA prediction method, which allows the prediction of peptide binding affinities for multiple MHC allotypes not used to train the model. Thus predictions can be made for many MHC allotypes for which experimental binding data is unavailable.  相似文献   

12.
The development of a defined anti-schistosomiasis vaccine would contribute to the current control strategy mainly because immunization provides long-lasting immunity to the disease. Sm14, one of the six Schistosoma mansoni antigens selected by WHO as a candidate to compose a subunit vaccine against schistosomiasis, has been associated with resistance to S. mansoni infection in human beings and is able to induce protection in the murine model. To identify human T cell epitopes in Sm14, we used the TEPITOPE algorithm to select peptides that would most likely bind to several HLA-DR molecules. In this study, three Sm14 epitopes were selected and produced as synthetic peptides. Human T cell responses from schistosomiasis patients living in endemic areas in Brazil were determined by proliferation assay and IL-5 and IFN-gamma measurements. Differential peptide recognition and cytokine production in response to Sm14 epitopes were observed in individuals resistant to S. mansoni infection versus susceptible individuals. Sm14(32-48) and Sm14(53-69) peptides were preferentially recognized by peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of S. mansoni-resistant individuals, and Sm14(53-69) induced significant production of IFN-gamma. Additionally, Sm14(32-48) and Sm14(53-69) were "promiscuous" peptides, since they were able to induce cellular immune responses in individuals carrying 10 and 8, respectively, of the 11 HLA-DR molecules expressed in the studied population. Among Sm14 synthetic peptides tested in this study, we identified Sm14(32-48) and Sm14(53-69) as promising candidates to compose an anti-schistosomiasis vaccine, since they seem to be related to resistance to human schistosomiasis.  相似文献   

13.
Recent studies have demonstrated the utility of synthetic combinatorial libraries for the rapid identification of peptide ligands that stimulate clonotypic populations of T cells. Here we screen a decapeptide combinatorial library arranged in a positional scanning format with two different clonotypic populations of CD4+ T cells to identify peptide epitopes that stimulate proliferative responses by these T cells in vitro. An extensive collection of mimic peptide sequences was synthesized and used to explore the fine specificity of TCR/peptide/MHC interactions. We also demonstrate that many of these deduced ligands are not only effective immunogens in vivo, but are capable of inducing T cell responses to the original native ligands used to generate the clones. These results have significant implications for considerations of T cell specificity and the design of peptide vaccines for infectious disease and cancer using clinically relevant T cell clones of unknown specificity.  相似文献   

14.
Recognition of peptide Ags by T cells through the TCR can be highly specific. In this report we show the degeneracy of Ag recognition at both MHC and TCR levels. We present evidence that unrelated promiscuous Th cell epitopes from various protein sources exhibit sufficient structural homology, despite minimal structural identity, to elicit cross-reactive proliferative responses at the bulk T cell level. This epitopic mimicry was also observed when peptide (CS.T3(378-395) and TT(830-844))-specific CD4+ T cell lines and T cell hybridoma clones were used in proliferation and Ag presentation assays. A scrambled CS.T3(378-395) peptide did not show any proliferation, indicating that the specificity of the cross-reactive responses may be linked with the primary structure of the peptides. Blocking of CS.T3(378-395)-specific CD4+ T cell proliferation by anti-MHC class II mAb showed that recognition of promiscuous T cell epitopes is largely in association with MHC class II molecules. These findings suggest that promiscuous Th epitopes may be useful in designing peptide-based vaccine constructs. At the same time these results show that at the T cell level there may be a great deal of immunological cross-reactivity between heterologous pathogens, and because of this the host's response to a pathogen may be modified by its previous experience with other unrelated pathogens.  相似文献   

15.
The molecular characterization of the epitope repertoire on herpes simplex virus (HSV) antigens would greatly expand our knowledge of HSV immunity and improve immune interventions against herpesvirus infections. HSV glycoprotein D (gD) is an immunodominant viral coat protein and is considered an excellent vaccine candidate antigen. By using the TEPITOPE prediction algorithm, we have identified and characterized a total of 12 regions within the HSV type 1 (HSV-1) gD bearing potential CD4(+) T-cell epitopes, each 27 to 34 amino acids in length. Immunogenicity studies of the corresponding medium-sized peptides confirmed all previously known gD epitopes and additionally revealed four new immunodominant regions (gD(49-82), gD(146-179), gD(228-257), and gD(332-358)), each containing naturally processed epitopes. These epitopes elicited potent T-cell responses in mice of diverse major histocompatibility complex backgrounds. Each of the four new immunodominant peptide epitopes generated strong CD4(+) Th1 T cells that were biologically active against HSV-1-infected bone marrow-derived dendritic cells. Importantly, immunization of H-2(d) mice with the four newly identified CD4(+) Th1 peptide epitopes but not with four CD4(+) Th2 peptide epitopes induced a robust protective immunity against lethal ocular HSV-1 challenge. These peptide epitopes may prove to be important components of an effective immunoprophylactic strategy against herpes.  相似文献   

16.
The identification of tumor-associated T cell epitopes has contributed significantly to the understanding of the interrelationship of tumor and immune system and is instrumental in the development of therapeutic vaccines for the treatment of cancer. Most of the known epitopes have been identified with prediction algorithms that compute the potential capacity of a peptide to bind to HLA class I molecules. However, naturally expressed T cell epitopes need not necessarily be strong HLA binders. To overcome this limitation of the available prediction algorithms we established a strategy for the identification of T cell epitopes that include suboptimal HLA binders. To this end, an artificial neural network was developed that predicts HLA-binding peptides in protein sequences by taking the entire sequence context into consideration rather than computing the sum of the contribution of the individual amino acids. Using this algorithm, we predicted seven HLA A*0201-restricted potential T cell epitopes from known melanoma-associated Ags that do not conform to the canonical anchor motif for this HLA molecule. All seven epitopes were validated as T cell epitopes and three as naturally processed by melanoma tumor cells. T cells for four of the new epitopes were found at elevated frequencies in the peripheral blood of melanoma patients. Modification of the peptides to the canonical sequence motifs led to improved HLA binding and to improved capacity to stimulate T cells.  相似文献   

17.
The identification of MHC class II epitope-based peptides are urgently needed for appropriate vaccination against Nipah virus (NiV) because there are currently no approved vaccines for human NiV infection. In the present study, prediction and modeling of T cell epitopes of NiV antigenic proteins nucleocapsid, phosphoprotein, matrix, fusion, glycoprotein, L protein, W protein, V protein and C protein followed by the binding simulation studies of predicted highest binding scores with their corresponding MHC class II alleles were done. Immunoinformatic tool ProPred was used to predict the promiscuous MHC class II epitopes of viral antigenic proteins. PEPstr server did the 3D structure models of the epitopes and Modeller 9.10 did alleles. We docked epitope with allele structure using the AutoDock 4.2 Tool. The docked peptide–allele complex structure was optimized using molecular dynamics simulation for 5 ps with the CHARMM-22 force field using NAnoscale Molecular Dynamics program incorporated in visual molecular dynamics (VMD 1.9.2) and then evaluating the stability of complex structure by calculating RMSD values. Epitope MKLQFSLGS of Matrix protein has considerable binding energy and score with DRBI*0421 MHC class II allele. This predicted peptide has potential to induce T cell-mediated immune response and is expected to useful in designing epitope-based vaccines against NiV after further testing by wet lab studies.  相似文献   

18.
NY-ESO-1 is frequently expressed in epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) and elicits spontaneous humoral and cellular immune responses in a proportion of EOC patients. The identification of NY-ESO-1 peptide epitopes with dual HLA-class I and class II specificities might be useful in vaccination strategies for generating cognate CD4+ T cell help to augment CD8+ T cell responses. Here, we describe two novel NY-ESO-1-derived MHC class I epitopes from EOC patients with spontaneous humoral immune response to NY-ESO-1. CD8+ T cells derived from NY-ESO-1 seropositive EOC patients were presensitized with a recombinant adenovirus encoding NY-ESO-1or pooled overlapping peptides. These epitopes, ESO127-136 presented by HLA-A68 molecule, and ESO127-135 restricted by HLA-Cw15 allele, are located within ESO119-143, a promiscuous HLA-class II region containing epitopes that bind to multiple HLA-DR alleles. The novel epitopes were naturally processed by APC or naturally presented by tumor cell lines. In addition, these epitopes induced NY-ESO-1-specific CTL in NY-ESO-1 seropositive EOC patients. Together, the results indicate that ESO119-143 epitope has dual HLA classes I and II specificities, and represents a potential vaccine candidate in a large number of cancer patients.  相似文献   

19.
There is now substantial evidence that antigen post-translational modifications are recognized by T cells, and alterations in epitope modification has been linked to a number of autoimmune diseases. An estimated one third of the MHC ligands contain post-translational modification of epitopes. A common post-translational modification of proteins is glycosylation and it is predicted on theoretical grounds that approximately 1-5% of MHC ligands may bear a glycan. From numerous studies over the past 15 years it is clear that glycans can influence T cell responses either by contribution to the structure of the epitope or by influencing the profile of peptide epitopes presented by APCs. The influence of glycans on antigen processing and T cell recognition has particular relevance to the induction of tolerance to self-antigens. Here we discuss the potential impact of glycans on the profile of self-epitopes presented by APCs and the consequence of changes in glycosylation to generate neo self-epitopes resulting in the loss of tolerance and the development of autoimmune diseases. With the recent developments in profiling T cell epitopes, and with strategies for modulating glycosylation in vivo, it is now feasible to directly examine the global influence of glycans on self-tolerance and autoimmunity.  相似文献   

20.
Traditionally, T cell epitope discovery requires considerable amounts of tedious, slow, and costly experimental work. During the last decade, prediction tools have emerged as essential tools allowing researchers to select a manageable list of epitope candidates to test from a larger peptide, protein, or even proteome. However, no current tools address the complexity caused by the highly polymorphic nature of the restricting HLA molecules, which effectively individualizes T cell responses. To fill this gap, we here present an easy-to-use prediction tool named HLArestrictor (), which is based on the highly versatile and accurate NetMHCpan predictor, which here has been optimized for the identification of both the MHC restriction element and the corresponding minimal epitope of a T cell response in a given individual. As input, it requires high-resolution (i.e., 4-digit) HLA typing of the individual. HLArestrictor then predicts all 8–11mer peptide binders within one or more larger peptides and provides an overview of the predicted HLA restrictions and minimal epitopes. The method was tested on a large dataset of HIV IFNγ ELIspot peptide responses and was shown to identify HLA restrictions and minimal epitopes for about 90% of the positive peptide/patient pairs while rejecting more than 95% of the negative peptide-HLA pairs. Furthermore, for 18 peptide/HLA tetramer validated responses, HLArestrictor in all cases predicted both the HLA restriction element and minimal epitope. Thus, HLArestrictor should be a valuable tool in any T cell epitope discovery process aimed at identifying new epitopes from infectious diseases and other disease models.  相似文献   

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