Antunes Dinler A, Rigo Maurício M, Freitas Martiela V, Mendes Marcus F A, Sinigaglia Marialva, Lizée Gregory, Kavraki Lydia E, Selin Liisa K, Cornberg Markus, Vieira Gustavo F
Núcleo de Bioinformática do Laboratório de Imunogenética (NBLI), Department of Genetics, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), Porto Alegre, Brazil.
Kavraki Lab, Department of Computer Science, Rice University, Houston, TX, United States.
Front Immunol. 2017 Oct 4;8:1210. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.01210. eCollection 2017.
Immunotherapy has become one of the most promising avenues for cancer treatment, making use of the patient's own immune system to eliminate cancer cells. Clinical trials with T-cell-based immunotherapies have shown dramatic tumor regressions, being effective in multiple cancer types and for many different patients. Unfortunately, this progress was tempered by reports of serious (even fatal) side effects. Such therapies rely on the use of cytotoxic T-cell lymphocytes, an essential part of the adaptive immune system. Cytotoxic T-cells are regularly involved in surveillance and are capable of both eliminating diseased cells and generating protective immunological memory. The specificity of a given T-cell is determined through the structural interaction between the T-cell receptor (TCR) and a peptide-loaded major histocompatibility complex (MHC); i.e., an intracellular peptide-ligand displayed at the cell surface by an MHC molecule. However, a given TCR can recognize different peptide-MHC (pMHC) complexes, which can sometimes trigger an unwanted response that is referred to as T-cell cross-reactivity. This has become a major safety issue in TCR-based immunotherapies, following reports of melanoma-specific T-cells causing cytotoxic damage to healthy tissues (e.g., heart and nervous system). T-cell cross-reactivity has been extensively studied in the context of viral immunology and tissue transplantation. Growing evidence suggests that it is largely driven by structural similarities of seemingly unrelated pMHC complexes. Here, we review recent reports about the existence of pMHC "hot-spots" for cross-reactivity and propose the existence of a TCR interaction profile (i.e., a refinement of a more general TCR footprint in which some amino acid residues are more important than others in triggering T-cell cross-reactivity). We also make use of available structural data and pMHC models to interpret previously reported cross-reactivity patterns among virus-derived peptides. Our study provides further evidence that structural analyses of pMHC complexes can be used to assess the intrinsic likelihood of cross-reactivity among peptide-targets. Furthermore, we hypothesize that some apparent inconsistencies in reported cross-reactivities, such as a preferential directionality, might also be driven by particular structural features of the targeted pMHC complex. Finally, we explain why TCR-based immunotherapy provides a special context in which meaningful T-cell cross-reactivity predictions can be made.
免疫疗法已成为癌症治疗最有前景的途径之一,它利用患者自身的免疫系统来消除癌细胞。基于T细胞的免疫疗法的临床试验已显示出显著的肿瘤消退情况,对多种癌症类型和许多不同患者都有效。不幸的是,严重(甚至致命)副作用的报告给这一进展带来了影响。此类疗法依赖于细胞毒性T淋巴细胞的使用,这是适应性免疫系统的重要组成部分。细胞毒性T细胞经常参与监测,既能消除病变细胞,又能产生保护性免疫记忆。特定T细胞的特异性是通过T细胞受体(TCR)与负载肽的主要组织相容性复合体(MHC)之间的结构相互作用来确定的;也就是说,是由MHC分子在细胞表面展示的细胞内肽配体。然而,给定的TCR可以识别不同的肽-MHC(pMHC)复合体,这有时会引发一种不必要的反应,即所谓的T细胞交叉反应性。在黑色素瘤特异性T细胞对健康组织(如心脏和神经系统)造成细胞毒性损伤的报告之后,这已成为基于TCR的免疫疗法中的一个主要安全问题。T细胞交叉反应性在病毒免疫学和组织移植的背景下已得到广泛研究。越来越多的证据表明,它在很大程度上是由看似无关的pMHC复合体的结构相似性驱动的。在这里,我们回顾了关于交叉反应性的pMHC“热点”存在的最新报告,并提出存在一种TCR相互作用图谱(即对更一般的TCR足迹的细化,其中一些氨基酸残基在引发T细胞交叉反应性方面比其他残基更重要)。我们还利用现有的结构数据和pMHC模型来解释先前报道的病毒衍生肽之间的交叉反应性模式。我们的研究提供了进一步的证据,表明对pMHC复合体的结构分析可用于评估肽靶点之间交叉反应性的内在可能性。此外,我们假设报告的交叉反应性中一些明显的不一致性,如优先方向性,也可能是由靶向pMHC复合体的特定结构特征驱动的。最后,我们解释了为什么基于TCR的免疫疗法提供了一个特殊的背景,在其中可以做出有意义的T细胞交叉反应性预测。