Cargando…

MHC Class I-Presented T Cell Epitopes Identified by Immunoproteomics Analysis Are Targets for a Cross Reactive Influenza-Specific T Cell Response

Influenza virus infection and the resulting complications are a significant global public health problem. Improving humoral immunity to influenza is the target of current conventional influenza vaccines, however, these are generally not cross-protective. On the contrary, cell-mediated immunity gener...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Testa, James S., Shetty, Vivekananda, Hafner, Julie, Nickens, Zacharie, Kamal, Shivali, Sinnathamby, Gomathinayagam, Philip, Ramila
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3492461/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23144892
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048484
_version_ 1782249141348335616
author Testa, James S.
Shetty, Vivekananda
Hafner, Julie
Nickens, Zacharie
Kamal, Shivali
Sinnathamby, Gomathinayagam
Philip, Ramila
author_facet Testa, James S.
Shetty, Vivekananda
Hafner, Julie
Nickens, Zacharie
Kamal, Shivali
Sinnathamby, Gomathinayagam
Philip, Ramila
author_sort Testa, James S.
collection PubMed
description Influenza virus infection and the resulting complications are a significant global public health problem. Improving humoral immunity to influenza is the target of current conventional influenza vaccines, however, these are generally not cross-protective. On the contrary, cell-mediated immunity generated by primary influenza infection provides substantial protection against serologically distinct viruses due to recognition of cross-reactive T cell epitopes, often from internal viral proteins conserved between viral subtypes. Efforts are underway to develop a universal flu vaccine that would stimulate both the humoral and cellular immune responses leading to long-lived memory. Such a universal vaccine should target conserved influenza virus antibody and T cell epitopes that do not vary from strain to strain. In the last decade, immunoproteomics, or the direct identification of HLA class I presented epitopes, has emerged as an alternative to the motif prediction method for the identification of T cell epitopes. In this study, we used this method to uncover several cross-specific MHC class I specific T cell epitopes naturally presented by influenza A-infected cells. These conserved T cell epitopes, when combined with a cross-reactive antibody epitope from the ectodomain of influenza M2, generate cross-strain specific cell mediated and humoral immunity. Overall, we have demonstrated that conserved epitope-specific CTLs could recognize multiple influenza strain infected target cells and, when combined with a universal antibody epitope, could generate virus specific humoral and T cell responses, a step toward a universal vaccine concept. These epitopes also have potential as new tools to characterize T cell immunity in influenza infection, and may serve as part of a universal vaccine candidate complementary to current vaccines.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3492461
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2012
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-34924612012-11-09 MHC Class I-Presented T Cell Epitopes Identified by Immunoproteomics Analysis Are Targets for a Cross Reactive Influenza-Specific T Cell Response Testa, James S. Shetty, Vivekananda Hafner, Julie Nickens, Zacharie Kamal, Shivali Sinnathamby, Gomathinayagam Philip, Ramila PLoS One Research Article Influenza virus infection and the resulting complications are a significant global public health problem. Improving humoral immunity to influenza is the target of current conventional influenza vaccines, however, these are generally not cross-protective. On the contrary, cell-mediated immunity generated by primary influenza infection provides substantial protection against serologically distinct viruses due to recognition of cross-reactive T cell epitopes, often from internal viral proteins conserved between viral subtypes. Efforts are underway to develop a universal flu vaccine that would stimulate both the humoral and cellular immune responses leading to long-lived memory. Such a universal vaccine should target conserved influenza virus antibody and T cell epitopes that do not vary from strain to strain. In the last decade, immunoproteomics, or the direct identification of HLA class I presented epitopes, has emerged as an alternative to the motif prediction method for the identification of T cell epitopes. In this study, we used this method to uncover several cross-specific MHC class I specific T cell epitopes naturally presented by influenza A-infected cells. These conserved T cell epitopes, when combined with a cross-reactive antibody epitope from the ectodomain of influenza M2, generate cross-strain specific cell mediated and humoral immunity. Overall, we have demonstrated that conserved epitope-specific CTLs could recognize multiple influenza strain infected target cells and, when combined with a universal antibody epitope, could generate virus specific humoral and T cell responses, a step toward a universal vaccine concept. These epitopes also have potential as new tools to characterize T cell immunity in influenza infection, and may serve as part of a universal vaccine candidate complementary to current vaccines. Public Library of Science 2012-11-07 /pmc/articles/PMC3492461/ /pubmed/23144892 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048484 Text en © 2012 Testa et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Testa, James S.
Shetty, Vivekananda
Hafner, Julie
Nickens, Zacharie
Kamal, Shivali
Sinnathamby, Gomathinayagam
Philip, Ramila
MHC Class I-Presented T Cell Epitopes Identified by Immunoproteomics Analysis Are Targets for a Cross Reactive Influenza-Specific T Cell Response
title MHC Class I-Presented T Cell Epitopes Identified by Immunoproteomics Analysis Are Targets for a Cross Reactive Influenza-Specific T Cell Response
title_full MHC Class I-Presented T Cell Epitopes Identified by Immunoproteomics Analysis Are Targets for a Cross Reactive Influenza-Specific T Cell Response
title_fullStr MHC Class I-Presented T Cell Epitopes Identified by Immunoproteomics Analysis Are Targets for a Cross Reactive Influenza-Specific T Cell Response
title_full_unstemmed MHC Class I-Presented T Cell Epitopes Identified by Immunoproteomics Analysis Are Targets for a Cross Reactive Influenza-Specific T Cell Response
title_short MHC Class I-Presented T Cell Epitopes Identified by Immunoproteomics Analysis Are Targets for a Cross Reactive Influenza-Specific T Cell Response
title_sort mhc class i-presented t cell epitopes identified by immunoproteomics analysis are targets for a cross reactive influenza-specific t cell response
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3492461/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23144892
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048484
work_keys_str_mv AT testajamess mhcclassipresentedtcellepitopesidentifiedbyimmunoproteomicsanalysisaretargetsforacrossreactiveinfluenzaspecifictcellresponse
AT shettyvivekananda mhcclassipresentedtcellepitopesidentifiedbyimmunoproteomicsanalysisaretargetsforacrossreactiveinfluenzaspecifictcellresponse
AT hafnerjulie mhcclassipresentedtcellepitopesidentifiedbyimmunoproteomicsanalysisaretargetsforacrossreactiveinfluenzaspecifictcellresponse
AT nickenszacharie mhcclassipresentedtcellepitopesidentifiedbyimmunoproteomicsanalysisaretargetsforacrossreactiveinfluenzaspecifictcellresponse
AT kamalshivali mhcclassipresentedtcellepitopesidentifiedbyimmunoproteomicsanalysisaretargetsforacrossreactiveinfluenzaspecifictcellresponse
AT sinnathambygomathinayagam mhcclassipresentedtcellepitopesidentifiedbyimmunoproteomicsanalysisaretargetsforacrossreactiveinfluenzaspecifictcellresponse
AT philipramila mhcclassipresentedtcellepitopesidentifiedbyimmunoproteomicsanalysisaretargetsforacrossreactiveinfluenzaspecifictcellresponse