Alexander B Afeyan, Catherine J Wu, Giacomo Oliveira
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The ability to screen the reactivity of T cell receptors (TCRs) is essential to understanding how antigen-specific T cells drive productive or dysfunctional immune responses during infections, cancer and autoimmune diseases. Methods to profile large numbers of TCRs are critical for characterizing immune responses sustained by diverse T cell clones. Here we provide a medium-throughput approach to reconstruct dozens to hundreds of TCRs in parallel, which can be simultaneously screened against primary human tissues and broad curated panels of antigenic targets. Using Gibson assembly and miniaturized lentiviral transduction, individual TCRs are rapidly cloned and expressed in T cells; before screening, TCR cell lines undergo combinatorial labeling with dilutions of three fluorescent dyes, which allows retrieval of the identity of individual T cell effectors when they are organized and tested in pools using flow cytometry. Upon incubation with target cells, we measure the upregulation of CD137 on T cells as a readout of TCR activation. This approach is scalable and simultaneously captures the reactivity of pooled TCR cell lines, whose activation can be deconvoluted in real time, thus providing a path for screening the reactivity of dozens of TCRs against broad panels of synthetic antigens or against cellular targets, such as human tumor cells. We applied this pipeline to systematically deconvolute the antitumoral and antiviral reactivity and antigenic specificity of TCRs from human tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes. This protocol takes ~2 months, from experimental design to data analysis, and requires standard expertise in cloning, cell culture and flow cytometry.
期刊介绍:
Nature Protocols focuses on publishing protocols used to address significant biological and biomedical science research questions, including methods grounded in physics and chemistry with practical applications to biological problems. The journal caters to a primary audience of research scientists and, as such, exclusively publishes protocols with research applications. Protocols primarily aimed at influencing patient management and treatment decisions are not featured.
The specific techniques covered encompass a wide range, including but not limited to: Biochemistry, Cell biology, Cell culture, Chemical modification, Computational biology, Developmental biology, Epigenomics, Genetic analysis, Genetic modification, Genomics, Imaging, Immunology, Isolation, purification, and separation, Lipidomics, Metabolomics, Microbiology, Model organisms, Nanotechnology, Neuroscience, Nucleic-acid-based molecular biology, Pharmacology, Plant biology, Protein analysis, Proteomics, Spectroscopy, Structural biology, Synthetic chemistry, Tissue culture, Toxicology, and Virology.