Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, W. Harry Feinstone Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, Baltimore, Maryland, USA; Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Mol Cell Proteomics. 2024 Sep;23(9):100823. doi: 10.1016/j.mcpro.2024.100823. Epub 2024 Jul 31.
Over the past 30 years, immunopeptidomics has grown alongside improvements in mass spectrometry technology, genomics, transcriptomics, T cell receptor sequencing, and immunological assays to identify and characterize the targets of activated T cells. Together, multiple research groups with expertise in immunology, biochemistry, chemistry, and peptide mass spectrometry have come together to enable the isolation and sequence identification of endogenous major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-bound peptides. The idea to apply highly sensitive mass spectrometry techniques to study the landscape of peptide antigens presented by cell surface MHCs was innovative and continues to be successfully used and improved upon to deepen our understanding of how peptide antigens are processed and presented to T cells. Multiple research groups were involved in this bringing immunopeptidomics to the forefront of translational research, and we will highlight the contributions of one of the earliest developers, Professor Donald F. Hunt, and his research group at the University of Virginia. The Hunt laboratory applied cutting edge mass spectroscopy-based immunopeptidomics to study cancer, autoimmunity, transplant rejection, and infectious diseases. Across these diverse research areas, the Hunt laboratory and collaborators would characterize previously unknown MHC peptide-binding motifs and identify immunologically active antigens using ultra sensitive mass spectrometry techniques. Amazingly, many of the MHC-bound peptide antigens discovered in collaborations with the Hunt laboratory were sequenced by mass spectrometry before the completion of the human genome using manual de novo sequencing. In this perspective article, we will chronicle the work of the Hunt laboratory and their many collaborators that would be a major part of the foundation for mass spectrometry-based immunopeptidomics and its application to immunology research.
在过去的 30 年中,免疫肽组学与质谱技术、基因组学、转录组学、T 细胞受体测序和免疫学检测的改进一起发展,以鉴定和描述激活 T 细胞的靶标。多个具有免疫学、生物化学、化学和肽质谱专业知识的研究小组共同合作,实现了内源性主要组织相容性复合物(MHC)结合肽的分离和序列鉴定。将高灵敏度质谱技术应用于研究细胞表面 MHC 呈递的肽抗原景观的想法具有创新性,并且一直在成功地使用和改进,以加深我们对肽抗原如何被加工和呈递给 T 细胞的理解。多个研究小组参与了这一过程,使免疫肽组学成为转化研究的前沿,我们将重点介绍最早的开发者之一,弗吉尼亚大学的 Donald F. Hunt 教授及其研究小组的贡献。Hunt 实验室应用最先进的基于质谱的免疫肽组学来研究癌症、自身免疫、移植排斥和传染病。在这些不同的研究领域中,Hunt 实验室及其合作者使用超灵敏质谱技术来描述以前未知的 MHC 肽结合基序,并鉴定免疫活性抗原。令人惊讶的是,与 Hunt 实验室合作发现的许多 MHC 结合肽抗原是在人类基因组完成之前使用手动从头测序通过质谱测序的。在这篇观点文章中,我们将记录 Hunt 实验室及其众多合作者的工作,这些工作将成为基于质谱的免疫肽组学及其在免疫学研究中的应用的重要基础的一部分。