A universal MHCII technology platform to characterize antigen-specific CD4+ T cells

Rohit Vyasamneni(BioNTech (United States)), Victoria Kohler(BioNTech (United States)), Binisha Karki(BioNTech (United States)), Gauri Mahimkar(BioNTech (United States)), Ekaterina Esaulova(BioNTech (United States)), J.H. McGee(BioNTech (United States)), Daniel Kallin(BioNTech (United States)), Joong Hyuk Sheen(BioNTech (United States)), Dewi Harjanto(BioNTech (United States)), Miles Kirsch(BioNTech (United States)), Asaf Poran(BioNTech (United States)), Jesse Z. Dong(BioNTech (United States)), Lakshmi Srinivasan(BioNTech (United States)), Richard B. Gaynor(BioNTech (United States)), Meghan E. Bushway(BioNTech (United States)), John Srouji(BioNTech (United States))
Cell Reports Methods
January 1, 2023
Cited by 11Open Access
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Abstract

CD4+ T cells are critical to the immune system and perform multiple functions; therefore, their identification and characterization are crucial to better understanding the immune system in both health and disease states. However, current methods rarely preserve their ex vivo phenotype, thus limiting our understanding of their in vivo functions. Here we introduce a flexible, rapid, and robust platform for ex vivo CD4+ T cell identification. By combining MHCII allele purification, allele-independent peptide loading, and multiplexed flow cytometry technologies, we can enable high-throughput personalized CD4+ T cell identification, immunophenotyping, and sorting. Using this platform in combination with single-cell sorting and multimodal analyses, we identified and characterized antigen-specific CD4+ T cells relevant to COVID-19 and cancer neoantigen immunotherapy. Overall, our platform can be used to detect and characterize CD4+ T cells across multiple diseases, with potential to guide CD4+ T cell epitope design for any disease-specific immunization strategy.


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