High-Throughput T Cell Profiling Technique Developed
|
By LabMedica International staff writers Posted on 13 May 2020 |

Image: Linking peptide specificities with T cell transcriptomes (Photo courtesy of University of California, Santa Cruz).
T cells recognize foreign or aberrant antigens presented by major histocompatibility complex (MHC-I) expressing cells through the T cell receptor (TCR) and is the first critical step towards establishment of protective immunity against viruses and tumors.
Staining with multivalent MHC class-I reagents (multimers) followed by flow cytometry is routinely used to interrogate T cell responses, to characterize antigen-specific TCR repertoires and to identify immunodominant clones. Fluorescently tagged multimers displaying individual peptides of interest have revolutionized detection of antigen specific T cells.
A team of scientists working with those at the University of California, Santa Cruz (Santa Cruz, CA, USA) have has developed an approach for high-throughput T cell profiling. The key advance is the ability to load peptides of interest on the MHC proteins that the body uses to present foreign antigens to the immune system. These MHC proteins display these antigens on the surface of cells, activating the body's T cell response, through which the immune system kills malfunctioning or infected cells.
The ability to express antigens in high-throughput fashion would be a boon for immunologists as it could, for instance, allow them to more rapidly and comprehensively profile patient responses to antigens linked to cancer or different infectious diseases. In the case of SARS-CoV-2, for example, the scientist could load MHC proteins with peptides comprising the full complement of the virus' proteins and look at which peptides were most important in prompting the T cell response or how T cell repertoires varied depending on the severity of infection or patient outcome.
To address unbound MHC, the team developed an approach using the protein TAPasin Binding Protein Related (TAPBPR), a chaperone protein that binds to MHCs to maintain their stability and also facilitates the exchange of peptides bound to the MHC. The process was streamlined somewhat by use of a workflow that produced MHCs bound to standard placeholder peptides instead of the particular peptide of interest, which allowed the team to produce MHC-antigen peptide complexes in bulk. The placeholder peptides were bound to the MHC via a photosensitive bond that could be disrupted by applying UV light, allowing the investigators to remove the placeholders and replace them with the actual peptides of interest when it was time to perform T cell profiling. The study was published on April 20, 2020 in the journal Nature Communications.
Related Links:
University of California, Santa Cruz
Staining with multivalent MHC class-I reagents (multimers) followed by flow cytometry is routinely used to interrogate T cell responses, to characterize antigen-specific TCR repertoires and to identify immunodominant clones. Fluorescently tagged multimers displaying individual peptides of interest have revolutionized detection of antigen specific T cells.
A team of scientists working with those at the University of California, Santa Cruz (Santa Cruz, CA, USA) have has developed an approach for high-throughput T cell profiling. The key advance is the ability to load peptides of interest on the MHC proteins that the body uses to present foreign antigens to the immune system. These MHC proteins display these antigens on the surface of cells, activating the body's T cell response, through which the immune system kills malfunctioning or infected cells.
The ability to express antigens in high-throughput fashion would be a boon for immunologists as it could, for instance, allow them to more rapidly and comprehensively profile patient responses to antigens linked to cancer or different infectious diseases. In the case of SARS-CoV-2, for example, the scientist could load MHC proteins with peptides comprising the full complement of the virus' proteins and look at which peptides were most important in prompting the T cell response or how T cell repertoires varied depending on the severity of infection or patient outcome.
To address unbound MHC, the team developed an approach using the protein TAPasin Binding Protein Related (TAPBPR), a chaperone protein that binds to MHCs to maintain their stability and also facilitates the exchange of peptides bound to the MHC. The process was streamlined somewhat by use of a workflow that produced MHCs bound to standard placeholder peptides instead of the particular peptide of interest, which allowed the team to produce MHC-antigen peptide complexes in bulk. The placeholder peptides were bound to the MHC via a photosensitive bond that could be disrupted by applying UV light, allowing the investigators to remove the placeholders and replace them with the actual peptides of interest when it was time to perform T cell profiling. The study was published on April 20, 2020 in the journal Nature Communications.
Related Links:
University of California, Santa Cruz
Latest Technology News
- Artificial Intelligence Model Could Accelerate Rare Disease Diagnosis
- AI Saliva Sensor Enables Early Detection of Head and Neck Cancer
- AI-Powered Biosensor Technology to Enable Breath Test for Lung Cancer Detection
- AI Model Achieves Breakthrough Accuracy in Ovarian Cancer Detection
- Portable Biosensor Diagnoses Psychiatric Disorders Using Saliva Samples
- Cell-Sorting Device Uses Electromagnetic Levitation to Precisely Direct Cell Movement

- Embedded GPU Platform Enables Rapid Blood Profiling for POC Diagnostics
- Viral Biosensor Test Simultaneously Detects Hepatitis and HIV
- Acoustofluidic Device to Transform Point-Of-Care sEV-Based Diagnostics
- AI Algorithm Assesses Progressive Decline in Kidney Function
Channels
Clinical Chemistry
view channel
Chemical Imaging Probe Could Track and Treat Prostate Cancer
Prostate cancer remains a leading cause of illness and death among men, with many patients eventually developing resistance to standard hormone-blocking therapies. These drugs often lose effectiveness... Read more
Mismatch Between Two Common Kidney Function Tests Indicates Serious Health Problems
Creatinine has long been the standard for measuring kidney filtration, while cystatin C — a protein produced by all human cells — has been recommended as a complementary marker because it is influenced... Read moreMolecular Diagnostics
view channel
Simple Urine Test to Revolutionize Bladder Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment
Bladder cancer is one of the most common and deadly urological cancers and is marked by a high rate of recurrence. Diagnosis and follow-up still rely heavily on invasive cystoscopy or urine cytology, which... Read more
Blood Test to Enable Earlier and Simpler Detection of Liver Fibrosis
Persistent liver damage caused by alcohol misuse or viral infections can trigger liver fibrosis, a condition in which healthy tissue is gradually replaced by collagen fibers. Even after successful treatment... Read moreHematology
view channel
Platelet Activity Blood Test in Middle Age Could Identify Early Alzheimer’s Risk
Early detection of Alzheimer’s disease remains one of the biggest unmet needs in neurology, particularly because the biological changes underlying the disorder begin decades before memory symptoms appear.... Read more
Microvesicles Measurement Could Detect Vascular Injury in Sickle Cell Disease Patients
Assessing disease severity in sickle cell disease (SCD) remains challenging, especially when trying to predict hemolysis, vascular injury, and risk of complications such as vaso-occlusive crises.... Read more
ADLM’s New Coagulation Testing Guidance to Improve Care for Patients on Blood Thinners
Direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) are one of the most common types of blood thinners. Patients take them to prevent a host of complications that could arise from blood clotting, including stroke, deep... Read moreMicrobiology
view channel
Rapid Diagnostic Test Matches Gold Standard for Sepsis Detection
Sepsis kills 11 million people worldwide every year and generates massive healthcare costs. In the USA and Europe alone, sepsis accounts for USD 100 billion in annual hospitalization expenses.... Read moreRapid POC Tuberculosis Test Provides Results Within 15 Minutes
Tuberculosis remains one of the world’s deadliest infectious diseases, and reducing new cases depends on identifying individuals with latent infection before it progresses. Current diagnostic tools often... Read more
Rapid Assay Identifies Bloodstream Infection Pathogens Directly from Patient Samples
Bloodstream infections in sepsis progress quickly and demand rapid, precise diagnosis. Current blood-culture methods often take one to five days to identify the pathogen, leaving clinicians to treat blindly... Read morePathology
view channel
Tunable Cell-Sorting Device Holds Potential for Multiple Biomedical Applications
Isolating rare cancer cells from blood is essential for diagnosing metastasis and guiding treatment decisions, but remains technically challenging. Many existing techniques struggle to balance accuracy,... Read moreAI Tool Outperforms Doctors in Spotting Blood Cell Abnormalities
Diagnosing blood disorders depends on recognizing subtle abnormalities in cell size, shape, and structure, yet this process is slow, subjective, and requires years of expert training. Even specialists... Read moreTechnology
view channel
Artificial Intelligence Model Could Accelerate Rare Disease Diagnosis
Identifying which genetic variants actually cause disease remains one of the biggest challenges in genomic medicine. Each person carries tens of thousands of DNA changes, yet only a few meaningfully alter... Read more
AI Saliva Sensor Enables Early Detection of Head and Neck Cancer
Early detection of head and neck cancer remains difficult because the disease produces few or no symptoms in its earliest stages, and lesions often lie deep within the head or neck, where biopsy or endoscopy... Read moreIndustry
view channel
Abbott Acquires Cancer-Screening Company Exact Sciences
Abbott (Abbott Park, IL, USA) has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Exact Sciences (Madison, WI, USA), enabling it to enter and lead in fast-growing cancer diagnostics segments.... Read more






 assay.jpg)

