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A Quantitative Analysis of Complexity of Human Pathogen-Specific CD4 T Cell Responses in Healthy M. tuberculosis Infected South Africans.

Authors :
Lindestam Arlehamn, Cecilia S
Lindestam Arlehamn, Cecilia S
McKinney, Denise M
Carpenter, Chelsea
Paul, Sinu
Rozot, Virginie
Makgotlho, Edward
Gregg, Yolande
van Rooyen, Michele
Ernst, Joel D
Hatherill, Mark
Hanekom, Willem A
Peters, Bjoern
Scriba, Thomas J
Sette, Alessandro
Lindestam Arlehamn, Cecilia S
Lindestam Arlehamn, Cecilia S
McKinney, Denise M
Carpenter, Chelsea
Paul, Sinu
Rozot, Virginie
Makgotlho, Edward
Gregg, Yolande
van Rooyen, Michele
Ernst, Joel D
Hatherill, Mark
Hanekom, Willem A
Peters, Bjoern
Scriba, Thomas J
Sette, Alessandro
Source :
PLoS pathogens; vol 12, iss 7, e1005760; 1553-7366
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

We performed a quantitative analysis of the HLA restriction, antigen and epitope specificity of human pathogen specific responses in healthy individuals infected with M. tuberculosis (Mtb), in a South African cohort as a test case. The results estimate the breadth of T cell responses for the first time in the context of an infection and human population setting. We determined the epitope repertoire of eleven representative Mtb antigens and a large panel of previously defined Mtb epitopes. We estimated that our analytic methods detected 50-75% of the total response in a cohort of 63 individuals. As expected, responses were highly heterogeneous, with responses to a total of 125 epitopes detected. The 66 top epitopes provided 80% coverage of the responses identified in our study. Using a panel of 48 HLA class II-transfected antigen-presenting cells, we determined HLA class II restrictions for 278 epitope/donor recognition events (36% of the total). The majority of epitopes were restricted by multiple HLA alleles, and 380 different epitope/HLA combinations comprised less than 30% of the estimated Mtb-specific response. Our results underline the complexity of human T cell responses at a population level. Efforts to capture and characterize this broad and highly HLA promiscuous Mtb-specific T cell epitope repertoire will require significant peptide multiplexing efforts. We show that a comprehensive "megapool" of Mtb peptides captured a large fraction of the Mtb-specific T cells and can be used to characterize this response.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
PLoS pathogens; vol 12, iss 7, e1005760; 1553-7366
Notes :
application/pdf, PLoS pathogens vol 12, iss 7, e1005760 1553-7366
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1287395996
Document Type :
Electronic Resource