MHC Multimer-Guided and Cell Culture-Independent Isolation of Functional T Cell Receptors from Single Cells Facilitates TCR Identification for Immunotherapy

Georg Dössinger, Mario Bunse, Jeannette Bet, Julia Albrecht, Paulina J. Paszkiewicz, Bianca Weißbrich, Isabell Schiedewitz, Lynette Henkel, Matthias Schiemann, Michael Neuenhahn, Wolfgang Uckert, Dirk H. Busch

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

36 Scopus citations

Abstract

Adoptive therapy using T cells redirected to target tumor- or infection-associated antigens is a promising strategy that has curative potential and broad applicability. In order to accelerate the screening process for suitable antigen-specific T cell receptors (TCRs), we developed a new approach circumventing conventional in vitro expansion-based strategies. Direct isolation of paired full-length TCR sequences from non-expanded antigen-specific T cells was achieved by the establishment of a highly sensitive PCR-based T cell receptor single cell analysis method (TCR-SCAN). Using MHC multimer-labeled and single cell-sorted HCMV-specific T cells we demonstrate a high efficacy (approximately 25%) and target specificity of TCR-SCAN receptor identification. In combination with MHC-multimer based pre-enrichment steps, we were able to isolate TCRs specific for the oncogenes Her2/neu and WT1 even from very small populations (original precursor frequencies of down to 0.00005% of CD3+ T cells) without any cell culture step involved. Genetic re-expression of isolated receptors demonstrates their functionality and target specificity. We believe that this new strategy of TCR identification may provide broad access to specific TCRs for therapeutically relevant T cell epitopes.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere61384
JournalPLoS ONE
Volume8
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 26 Apr 2013

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'MHC Multimer-Guided and Cell Culture-Independent Isolation of Functional T Cell Receptors from Single Cells Facilitates TCR Identification for Immunotherapy'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this