4.2 Article

Engineering higher affinity T cell receptors using a T cell display system

Journal

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGICAL METHODS
Volume 339, Issue 2, Pages 175-184

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jim.2008.09.016

Keywords

T cell receptors; Affinity; Peptide-MHC; Protein engineering; Retroviral vectors

Funding

  1. NIH [GM55767, GM07283]
  2. McDonnell Foundation 21st Century Science Initiative in Brain Cancer Research

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The T cell receptor (TCR) determines the cellular response to antigens, which are presented on the surface of target cells in the form of a peptide bound to a product of the major histocompatibility complex (pepMHC). The response of the T cell depends on the affinity of the TCR for the pepMHC, yet many TCRs have been shown to be of low affinity, and some naturally occurring T cell responses are poor due to low affinities. Accordingly, engineering the TCR for increased affinity for pepMHC, particularly tumor-associated antigens, has become an increasingly desirable goal, especially with the advent of adoptive T cell therapies. For largely technical reasons, to date there have been only a handful of TCRs engineered in vitro for higher affinity using well established methods of protein engineering. Here we report the use of a T cell display system, using a retroviral vector, for generating a high-affinity TCR from the mouse T cell clone 2C. The method relies on the display of the TCR, in its normal, signaling competent state, as a CD3 complex on the T cell surface. A library in the CDR3 alpha of the 2C TCR was generated in the MSCV retroviral vector and transduced into a TCR-negative hybridoma. Selection of a high-affinity, CD8-independent TCR was accomplished after only two rounds of flow cytometric sorting using the pepMHCS SIYRYYGL/K-b (SIY/K-b). The selected TCR contained a sequence motif in the CDR3 alpha with characteristics of several other TCRs previously selected by yeast display. in addition, it was possible to directly use the selected T cell hybridoma in functional assays without the need for sub-cloning, revealing that the selected TCR was capable of mediating CD8-independent activity. The method may be useful in the direct isolation and characterization of TCRs that could be used in therapies with adoptive transferred T cells. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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