University of Zurich
ORCID: 0000-0001-8399-4124Publishes on SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research, Immunotherapy and Immune Responses, vaccines and immunoinformatics approaches. 13 papers and 298 citations.
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The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic calls for more effective diagnostic tools. T cell response assessment serves as an independent indicator of prior COVID-19 exposure while also contributing to a more comprehensive characterization of SARS-CoV-2 immunity. In this study, we systematically assessed the immunogenicity of 118 epitopes with immune cells collected from multiple cohorts of vaccinated, convalescent, healthy unexposed, and SARS-CoV-2-exposed donors. We identified 75 immunogenic epitopes, 24 of which were immunodominant. We further confirmed HLA restriction for 49 epitopes and described association with more than 1 HLA allele for 14 of these. Exclusion of 2 cross-reactive epitopes that generated a response in prepandemic samples left us with a 73-epitope set that offered excellent diagnostic specificity without losing sensitivity compared with full-length antigens, and this evoked a robust cross-reactive response. We subsequently incorporated this set of epitopes into an in vitro diagnostic Corona-T-test, which achieved a diagnostic accuracy of 95% in a clinical trial. In a cohort of asymptomatic seronegative individuals with a history of prolonged SARS-CoV-2 exposure, we observed a complete absence of T cell response to our epitope panel. In combination with strong reactivity to full-length antigens, this suggests that a cross-reactive response might protect these individuals.
T cells play a pivotal role in reducing disease severity during SARS-CoV-2 infection and formation of long-term immune memory. We studied 50 COVID-19 convalescent patients and found that T cell response was induced more frequently and persisted longer than circulating antibodies. We identified 756 clonotypes specific to nine CD8+ T cell epitopes. Some epitopes were recognized by highly similar public clonotypes. Receptors for other epitopes were extremely diverse, suggesting alternative modes of recognition. We tracked persistence of epitope-specific response and individual clonotypes for a median of eight months after infection. The number of recognized epitopes per patient and quantity of epitope-specific clonotypes decreased over time, but the studied epitopes were characterized by uneven decline in the number of specific T cells. Epitopes with more clonally diverse TCR repertoires induced more pronounced and durable responses. In contrast, the abundance of specific clonotypes in peripheral circulation had no influence on their persistence.
Subset of MHC-associated self-peptides presented by the recipient cells but immunologically foreign to the donor cells can induce allogeneic immune response after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). These immunogenic peptides originate from the genomic polymorphisms and are known as minor histocompatibility antigens (MiHA). The peptides’ disparities trigger the post-transplant immune response, which could manifest in both deleterious “graft-versus-host” disease and beneficial “graft-versus-leukemia” effect. Importantly, some MiHAs are considered as a promising target for a posttransplant T-cell immunotherapy of hematopoietic malignancies. This creates the demand for robust and fast genotyping approaches of MiHA encoding polymorphisms. Here we report a multiplex real-time PCR method for rapid genotyping of 20 polymorphisms encoding HLA*02:01 restricted MiHAs. It utilizes allele-specific primers and gene-specific hydrolysis probes and allows detection of MiHA mismatches in a donor-recipient pair without the need of electrophoresis, sequencing or other time-consuming techniques in less than one hour. The method was validated with Sanger sequencing on 5 donor-patient pairs undergoing HSCT and demonstrated good performance over a wide range of DNA concentrations. We propose our genotyping protocol as a fast and accurate method to identify mismatched MiHAs to be used both in clinical and scientific research. The information of MiHA mismatches is useful for studies of allogeneic immune response following HSCT and for target selection in a posttransplant T-cell therapy.
Adenovirus vaccines, particularly the COVID-19 Ad5-nCoV adenovirus vaccine, have emerged as promising tools in the fight against infectious diseases. In this study, we investigated the structure of the T cell response to the Spike protein of the SARS-CoV-2 virus used in the COVID-19 Ad5-nCoV adenoviral vaccine in a phase 3 clinical trial (NCT04540419). In 69 participants, we collected peripheral blood samples at four time points after vaccination or placebo injection. Sequencing of T cell receptor repertoires from Spike-stimulated T cell cultures at day 14 from 17 vaccinated revealed a more diverse CD4 + T cell repertoire compared to CD8 + . Nevertheless, CD8 + clonotypes accounted for more than half of the Spike-specific repertoire. Our longitudinal analysis showed a peak T cell response at day 14, followed by a decline until month 6. Remarkably, multiple T cell clonotypes persisted for at least 6 months after vaccination, as demonstrated by ex vivo stimulation. Examination of CDR3 regions revealed homologous sequences in both CD4 + and CD8 + clonotypes, with major CD8 + clonotypes sharing high similarity with annotated sequences specific for the NYNYLYRLF peptide, suggesting potential immunodominance. In conclusion, our study demonstrates the immunogenicity of the Ad5-nCoV adenoviral vaccine and highlights its ability to induce robust and durable T cell responses. These findings provide valuable insight into the efficacy of the vaccine against COVID-19 and provide critical information for ongoing efforts to control infectious diseases.