Title
The two-faced T cell epitope: Examining the host-microbe interface with JanusMatrix
Date Issued
01 July 2013
Access level
open access
Resource Type
conference paper
Author(s)
Moise L.
Bailey-Kellogg C.
Terry F.
Leng Q.
Abdel Hady K.
VerBerkmoes N.
Sztein M.
Losikoff P.
Martin W.
Rothman A.
De Groot A.
University of Rhode Island
Publisher(s)
Taylor & Francis
Abstract
Advances in the field of T cell immunology have contributed to the understanding that cross-reactivity is an intrinsic characteristic of the T cell receptor (TCR), and that each TCR can potentially interact with many different T cell epitopes. To better define the potential for TCR cross-reactivity between epitopes derived from the human genome, the human microbiome, and human pathogens, we developed a new immunoinformatics tool, JanusMatrix, that represents an extension of the validated T cell epitope mapping tool, EpiMatrix. Initial explorations, summarized in this synopsis, have uncovered what appear to be important differences in the TCR cross-reactivity of selected regulatory and effector T cell epitopes with other epitopes in the human genome, human microbiome, and selected human pathogens. In addition to exploring the T cell epitope relationships between human self, commensal and pathogen, JanusMatrix may also be useful to explore some aspects of heterologous immunity and to examine T cell epitope relatedness between pathogens to which humans are exposed (Dengue serotypes, or HC V and Influenza, for example). In Hand-Foot-Mouth disease (HFMD) for example, extensive enterovirus and human microbiome cross-reactivity (and limited cross-reactivity with the human genome) seemingly predicts immunodominance. In contrast, more extensive cross-reactivity with proteins contained in the human genome as compared to the human microbiome was observed for selected Treg epitopes. While it may be impossible to predict all immune response influences, the availability of sequence data from the human genome, the human microbiome, and an array of human pathogens and vaccines has made computationally-driven exploration of the effects of T cell epitope cross-reactivity now possible. This is the first description of JanusMatrix, an algorithm that assesses TCR cross-reactivity that may contribute to a means of predicting the phenotype of T cells responding to selected T cell epitopes. Whether used for explorations of T cell phenotype or for evaluating cross-conservation between related viral strains at the TCR face of viral epitopes, further JanusMatrix studies may contribute to developing safer, more effective vaccines. © 2013 Landes Bioscience.
Start page
1577
End page
1586
Volume
9
Issue
7
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Biología celular, Microbiología Inmunología
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84880911013
PubMed ID
Source
Human Vaccines and Immunotherapeutics
ISSN of the container
21645515, 2164554X
Sponsor(s)
Funding to support the discussions leading to the development of the JanusMatrix tool can be attributed to the NIH U19 grant (AI082642) (to ADG) and the generation of healthy human-microbial distal gut metaproteome data was supported by grants R01-AI036525 and U19 AI082655 (to M.B.S). We are grateful to Lauren Levitz and Ryan Tassone for a close reading of the draft manuscript. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases or the National Institutes of Health.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus