4.6 Article

Idiotope-Driven T-Cell/B-Cell Collaboration-Based T-Cell Epitope Prediction Using B-Cell Receptor Repertoire Sequences in Infectious Diseases

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 15, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v15051186

Keywords

T-cell epitope; antigen; idiotype network; repertoire analysis; anti-idiotypic antibody; idiotope-driven T-B collaboration; molecular mimicry; B-cell

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Recognition of T-cell epitopes is crucial for adaptive immune responses, but existing prediction methods often neglect T-cell receptor-recognized epitope sequences. In this study, we developed a method that identifies T-cell epitopes derived from antigen proteins by analyzing B-cell receptor sequences. Our method successfully identified T-cell epitopes associated with viral infections and demonstrated immunogenicity. Thus, this method is a powerful tool for discovering T-cell epitopes from BCR sequences.
T-cell recognition of antigen epitopes is a crucial step for the induction of adaptive immune responses, and the identification of such T-cell epitopes is, therefore, important for understanding diverse immune responses and controlling T-cell immunity. A number of bioinformatic tools exist that predict T-cell epitopes; however, many of these methods highly rely on evaluating conventional peptide presentation by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules, but they ignore epitope sequences recognized by T-cell receptor (TCR). Immunogenic determinant idiotopes are present on the variable regions of immunoglobulin molecules expressed on and secreted by B-cells. In idiotope-driven T-cell/B-cell collaboration, B-cells present the idiotopes on MHC molecules for recognition by idiotope-specific T-cells. According to the idiotype network theory formulated by Niels Jerne, such idiotopes found on anti-idiotypic antibodies exhibit molecular mimicry of antigens. Here, by combining these concepts and defining the patterns of TCR-recognized epitope motifs (TREMs), we developed a T-cell epitope prediction method that identifies T-cell epitopes derived from antigen proteins by analyzing B-cell receptor (BCR) sequences. This method allowed us to identify T-cell epitopes that contain the same TREM patterns between BCR and viral antigen sequences in two different infectious diseases caused by dengue virus and SARS-CoV-2 infection. The identified epitopes were among the T-cell epitopes detected in previous studies, and T-cell stimulatory immunogenicity was confirmed. Thus, our data support this method as a powerful tool for the discovery of T-cell epitopes from BCR sequences.

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