4.6 Article

The T210M Substitution in the HLA-a*02:01 gp100 Epitope Strongly Affects Overall Proteasomal Cleavage Site Usage and Antigen Processing

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 290, Issue 51, Pages 30417-30428

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M115.695189

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Berlin Institute of Health [CRG1-TP1]
  2. Einstein Stiftung Berlin [A2013-174]
  3. NC3Rs (National Center for the Replacement, Refinement, and Reduction of Animal in Research) through a David Sainsbury Fellowship [NC/K001949/1]
  4. National Centre for the Replacement, Refinement and Reduction of Animals in Research (NC3Rs) [NC/K001949/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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MHC class I-restricted epitopes, which carry a tumor-specific mutation resulting in improved MHC binding affinity, are preferred T cell receptor targets in innovative adoptive T cell therapies. However, T cell therapy requires efficient generation of the selected epitope. How such mutations may affect proteasome-mediated antigen processing has so far not been studied. Therefore, we analyzed by in vitro experiments the effect on antigen processing and recognition of a T210M exchange, which previously had been introduced into the melanoma gp100(209-217) tumor epitope to improve the HLA-A*02: 01 binding and its immunogenicity. A quantitative analysis of the main steps of antigen processing shows that the T210M exchange affects proteasomal cleavage site usage within the (mut)gp100(201-230) polypeptide, leading to the generation of an unique set of cleavage products. The T210M substitution qualitatively affects the proteasome-catalyzed generation of spliced and non-spliced peptides predicted to bind HLA-A or -B complexes. The T210M substitution also induces an enhanced production of the (mut)gp100(209-217) epitope and its N-terminally extended peptides. The T210M exchange revealed no effect on ERAP1-mediated N-terminal trimming of the precursor peptides. However, mutant N-terminally extended peptides exhibited significantly increased HLA-A*02:01 binding affinity and elicited CD8(+) T cell stimulation in vitro similar to the (wt)gp100(209-217) epitope. Thus, our experiments demonstrate that amino acid exchanges within an epitope can result in the generation of an altered peptide pool with new antigenic peptides and in a wider CD8(+) T cell response also towards N-terminally extended versions of the minimal epitope.

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