Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Montrer: 20 | 50 | 100
Résultats 1 - 7 de 7
Filtrer
Plus de filtres










Base de données
Gamme d'année
1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 121(19): e2318003121, 2024 May 07.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38691588

RÉSUMÉ

Peptides presented by HLA-E, a molecule with very limited polymorphism, represent attractive targets for T cell receptor (TCR)-based immunotherapies to circumvent the limitations imposed by the high polymorphism of classical HLA genes in the human population. Here, we describe a TCR-based bispecific molecule that potently and selectively binds HLA-E in complex with a peptide encoded by the inhA gene of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), the causative agent of tuberculosis in humans. We reveal the biophysical and structural bases underpinning the potency and specificity of this molecule and demonstrate its ability to redirect polyclonal T cells to target HLA-E-expressing cells transduced with mycobacterial inhA as well as primary cells infected with virulent Mtb. Additionally, we demonstrate elimination of Mtb-infected cells and reduction of intracellular Mtb growth. Our study suggests an approach to enhance host T cell immunity against Mtb and provides proof of principle for an innovative TCR-based therapeutic strategy overcoming HLA polymorphism and therefore applicable to a broader patient population.


Sujet(s)
Antigènes d'histocompatibilité de classe I , Mycobacterium tuberculosis , Récepteurs aux antigènes des cellules T , Lymphocytes T , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/immunologie , Humains , Récepteurs aux antigènes des cellules T/immunologie , Récepteurs aux antigènes des cellules T/métabolisme , Antigènes d'histocompatibilité de classe I/immunologie , Antigènes d'histocompatibilité de classe I/métabolisme , Lymphocytes T/immunologie , , Protéines bactériennes/immunologie , Protéines bactériennes/métabolisme , Protéines bactériennes/génétique , Tuberculose/immunologie
2.
Hepatology ; 72(5): 1528-1540, 2020 11.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32770836

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Therapies for chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection are urgently needed because of viral integration, persistence of viral antigen expression, inadequate HBV-specific immune responses, and treatment regimens that require lifelong adherence to suppress the virus. Immune mobilizing monoclonal T Cell receptors against virus (ImmTAV) molecules represent a therapeutic strategy combining an affinity-enhanced T Cell receptor with an anti-CD3 T Cell-activating moiety. This bispecific fusion protein redirects T cells to specifically lyse infected cells expressing the target virus-derived peptides presented by human leukocyte antigen (HLA). APPROACH AND RESULTS: ImmTAV molecules specific for HLA-A*02:01-restricted epitopes from HBV envelope, polymerase, and core antigens were engineered. The ability of ImmTAV-Env to activate and redirect polyclonal T cells toward cells containing integrated HBV and cells infected with HBV was assessed using cytokine secretion assays and imaging-based killing assays. Elimination of infected cells was further quantified using a modified fluorescent hybridization of viral RNA assay. Here, we demonstrate that picomolar concentrations of ImmTAV-Env can redirect T cells from healthy and HBV-infected donors toward hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cells containing integrated HBV DNA resulting in cytokine release, which could be suppressed by the addition of a corticosteroid in vitro. Importantly, ImmTAV-Env redirection of T cells induced cytolysis of antigen-positive HCC cells and cells infected with HBV in vitro, causing a reduction of hepatitis B e antigen and specific loss of cells expressing viral RNA. CONCLUSIONS: The ImmTAV platform has the potential to enable the elimination of infected cells by redirecting endogenous non-HBV-specific T cells, bypassing exhausted HBV-specific T cells. This represents a promising therapeutic option in the treatment of chronic hepatitis B, with our lead candidate now entering trials.


Sujet(s)
Virus de l'hépatite B/immunologie , Hépatite B chronique/traitement médicamenteux , Récepteurs aux antigènes des cellules T/usage thérapeutique , Protéines de fusion recombinantes/pharmacologie , Lymphocytes T/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Anticorps monoclonaux/génétique , Anticorps monoclonaux/immunologie , Anticorps monoclonaux/pharmacologie , Anticorps monoclonaux/usage thérapeutique , Antigènes CD3/antagonistes et inhibiteurs , Lignée cellulaire tumorale , Épitopes/immunologie , Antigène HLA-A2/immunologie , Antigènes de surface du virus de l'hépatite B/immunologie , Virus de l'hépatite B/isolement et purification , Hépatite B chronique/immunologie , Hépatite B chronique/virologie , Hépatocytes , Humains , Immunoconjugués/génétique , Immunoconjugués/immunologie , Immunoconjugués/pharmacologie , Immunoconjugués/usage thérapeutique , Activation des lymphocytes/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Culture de cellules primaires , Récepteurs aux antigènes des cellules T/génétique , Récepteurs aux antigènes des cellules T/immunologie , Protéines de fusion recombinantes/génétique , Protéines de fusion recombinantes/immunologie , Protéines de fusion recombinantes/usage thérapeutique , Lymphocytes T/immunologie
3.
PLoS Pathog ; 16(3): e1008412, 2020 03.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32226041

RÉSUMÉ

Bats are the natural reservoir host for a number of zoonotic viruses, including Hendra virus (HeV) which causes severe clinical disease in humans and other susceptible hosts. Our understanding of the ability of bats to avoid clinical disease following infection with viruses such as HeV has come predominantly from in vitro studies focusing on innate immunity. Information on the early host response to infection in vivo is lacking and there is no comparative data on responses in bats compared with animals that succumb to disease. In this study, we examined the sites of HeV replication and the immune response of infected Australian black flying foxes and ferrets at 12, 36 and 60 hours post exposure (hpe). Viral antigen was detected at 60 hpe in bats and was confined to the lungs whereas in ferrets there was evidence of widespread viral RNA and antigen by 60 hpe. The mRNA expression of IFNs revealed antagonism of type I and III IFNs and a significant increase in the chemokine, CXCL10, in bat lung and spleen following infection. In ferrets, there was an increase in the transcription of IFN in the spleen following infection. Liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) on lung tissue from bats and ferrets was performed at 0 and 60 hpe to obtain a global overview of viral and host protein expression. Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment analysis of immune pathways revealed that six pathways, including a number involved in cell mediated immunity were more likely to be upregulated in bat lung compared to ferrets. GO analysis also revealed enrichment of the type I IFN signaling pathway in bats and ferrets. This study contributes important comparative data on differences in the dissemination of HeV and the first to provide comparative data on the activation of immune pathways in bats and ferrets in vivo following infection.


Sujet(s)
Antigènes viraux/immunologie , Virus Hendra/immunologie , Infections à hénipavirus/immunologie , Immunité cellulaire , Immunité innée , Poumon/immunologie , Modèles immunologiques , Animaux , Antigènes viraux/génétique , Chimiokine CXCL10/génétique , Chimiokine CXCL10/immunologie , Chiroptera , Furets , Virus Hendra/génétique , Infections à hénipavirus/génétique , Infections à hénipavirus/anatomopathologie , Interférons/génétique , Interférons/immunologie , Poumon/anatomopathologie , Poumon/virologie , Spécificité d'espèce
4.
Semin Cell Dev Biol ; 84: 22-29, 2018 12.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30449533

RÉSUMÉ

Viruses are intracellular pathogens that cause a vast array of diseases, which are often severe and typified by high morbidity and mortality rates. Viral infections continue to be a global health burden and effective vaccines and therapeutics are constantly sought to prevent and treat these infections. The development of such treatments generally relies on understanding the mechanisms that underpin efficient host antiviral immune responses. This review summarises recent developments in our understanding of antiviral adaptive immunity and in particular, highlights the use of mass spectrometry to elucidate viral antigens and their processing and presentation to T cells and other immune effectors. These processed peptides serve as potential vaccine candidates or may facilitate clinical monitoring, diagnosis and immunotherapy of infectious diseases.


Sujet(s)
Immunité acquise/immunologie , Protéomique , Lymphocytes T/immunologie , Maladies virales/immunologie , Immunité acquise/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Animaux , Antiviraux/pharmacologie , Maladies transmissibles/immunologie , Humains
5.
J Virol ; 91(23)2017 12 01.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28931675

RÉSUMÉ

Ebolavirus and Marburgvirus comprise two genera of negative-sense single-stranded RNA viruses that cause severe hemorrhagic fevers in humans. Despite considerable research efforts, the molecular events following Ebola virus (EBOV) infection are poorly understood. With the view of identifying host factors that underpin EBOV pathogenesis, we compared the transcriptomes of EBOV-infected human, pig, and bat kidney cells using a transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq) approach. Despite a significant difference in viral transcription/replication between the cell lines, all cells responded to EBOV infection through a robust induction of extracellular growth factors. Furthermore, a significant upregulation of activator protein 1 (AP1) transcription factor complex members FOS and JUN was observed in permissive cell lines. Functional studies focusing on human cells showed that EBOV infection induces protein expression, phosphorylation, and nuclear accumulation of JUN and, to a lesser degree, FOS. Using a luciferase-based reporter, we show that EBOV infection induces AP1 transactivation activity within human cells at 48 and 72 h postinfection. Finally, we show that JUN knockdown decreases the expression of EBOV-induced host gene expression. Taken together, our study highlights the role of AP1 in promoting the host gene expression profile that defines EBOV pathogenesis.IMPORTANCE Many questions remain about the molecular events that underpin filovirus pathophysiology. The rational design of new intervention strategies, such as postexposure therapeutics, will be significantly enhanced through an in-depth understanding of these molecular events. We believe that new insights into the molecular pathogenesis of EBOV may be possible by examining the transcriptomic response of taxonomically diverse cell lines (derived from human, pig, and bat). We first identified the responsive pathways using an RNA-seq-based transcriptomics approach. Further functional and computational analysis focusing on human cells highlighted an important role for the AP1 transcription factor in mediating the transcriptional response to EBOV infection. Our study sheds new light on how host transcription factors respond to and promote the transcriptional landscape that follows viral infection.


Sujet(s)
Analyse de profil d'expression de gènes , Fièvre hémorragique à virus Ebola/virologie , Interactions hôte-pathogène , Facteur de transcription AP-1/métabolisme , Animaux , Lignée cellulaire , Chiroptera , Ebolavirus/pathogénicité , Gènes fos , Gènes jun , Séquençage nucléotidique à haut débit , Humains , Rein/cytologie , Rein/virologie , Phosphorylation , Suidae , Facteur de transcription AP-1/génétique , Protéines virales , Réplication virale
6.
J Immunol ; 196(11): 4468-76, 2016 06 01.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27183594

RÉSUMÉ

Bats are a major reservoir of emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases, including severe acute respiratory syndrome-like coronaviruses, henipaviruses, and Ebola virus. Although highly pathogenic to their spillover hosts, bats harbor these viruses, and a large number of other viruses, with little or no clinical signs of disease. How bats asymptomatically coexist with these viruses is unknown. In particular, little is known about bat adaptive immunity, and the presence of functional MHC molecules is mostly inferred from recently described genomes. In this study, we used an affinity purification/mass spectrometry approach to demonstrate that a bat MHC class I molecule, Ptal-N*01:01, binds antigenic peptides and associates with peptide-loading complex components. We identified several bat MHC class I-binding partners, including calnexin, calreticulin, protein disulfide isomerase A3, tapasin, TAP1, and TAP2. Additionally, endogenous peptide ligands isolated from Ptal-N*01:01 displayed a relatively broad length distribution and an unusual preference for a C-terminal proline residue. Finally, we demonstrate that this preference for C-terminal proline residues was observed in Hendra virus-derived peptides presented by Ptal-N*01:01 on the surface of infected cells. To our knowledge, this is the first study to identify endogenous and viral MHC class I ligands for any bat species and, as such, provides an important avenue for monitoring and development of vaccines against major bat-borne viruses both in the reservoir and spillover hosts. Additionally, it will provide a foundation to understand the role of adaptive immunity in bat antiviral responses.


Sujet(s)
Présentation d'antigène/immunologie , Antigènes/immunologie , Chiroptera/immunologie , Gènes MHC de classe I/immunologie , Peptides/immunologie , Allèles , Animaux , Présentation d'antigène/génétique , Antigènes/génétique , Chiroptera/génétique , Gènes MHC de classe I/génétique , Humains
7.
PLoS One ; 8(11): e79367, 2013.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24223932

RÉSUMÉ

The CagA protein of Helicobacter pylori is associated with increased virulence and gastric cancer risk. CagA is translocated into the host cell by a H. pylori type IV secretion system via mechanisms that are poorly understood. Translocated CagA interacts with numerous host factors, altering a variety of host signalling pathways. The recently determined crystal structure of C-terminally-truncated CagA indicated the presence of two domains: the smaller, flexible N-terminal domain and the larger, middle domain. In this study, we have investigated the conformation, oligomeric state and stability of the N-terminal, middle and glutamate-proline-isoleucine-tyrosine-alanine (EPIYA)-repeats domains. All three domains are monomeric, suggesting that the multimerisation of CagA observed in infected cells is likely to be mediated not by CagA itself but by its interacting partners. The middle and the C-terminal domains, but not the N-terminal domain, are capable of refolding spontaneously upon heat denaturation, lending support to the hypothesis that unfolded CagA is threaded C-terminus first through the type IV secretion channel with its N-terminal domain, which likely requires interactions with other domains to refold, being threaded last. Our findings also revealed that the C-terminal EPIYA-repeats domain of CagA exists in an intrinsically disordered premolten globule state with regions in PPII conformation--a feature that is shared by many scaffold proteins that bind multiple protein components of signalling pathways. Taken together, these results provide a deeper understanding of the physicochemical properties of CagA that underpin its complex cellular and oncogenic functions.


Sujet(s)
Antigènes bactériens/composition chimique , Protéines bactériennes/composition chimique , Séquence d'acides aminés , Antigènes bactériens/métabolisme , Protéines bactériennes/métabolisme , Cristallographie aux rayons X , Modèles moléculaires , Données de séquences moléculaires , Dénaturation des protéines , Multimérisation de protéines , Stabilité protéique , Structure secondaire des protéines , Structure tertiaire des protéines , Protéolyse , Séquences répétées d'acides aminés , Température
SÉLECTION CITATIONS
DÉTAIL DE RECHERCHE