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Evaluation of a fit-for-purpose assay to monitor antigen-specific functional CD4+ T-cell subpopulations in rheumatoid arthritis using flow cytometry–based peptide-MHC class-II tetramer staining.

Authors :
Patel, Swati
Ramnoruth, Nishta
Wehr, Pascale
Rossjohn, Jamie
Reid, Hugh H
Campbell, Kim
Nel, Hendrik J
Thomas, Ranjeny
Source :
Clinical & Experimental Immunology; Jan2022, Vol. 207 Issue 1, p72-83, 12p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Antigen-specific T cells can serve as a response biomarker in non-clinical or clinical immunotherapy studies in autoimmune disease. There are protocols with optimized multimer staining methods to detect peptide (p)MHCII+ CD4+ T cells, and some qualified and validated protocols for pMHCI+ CD8+ T cells. However, no protocol is fully or partially qualified to enumerate and characterize antigen-specific pMHCII+ CD4+ T cells from patient samples. Implementing such an assay requires a desired level of specificity and precision, in terms of assay repeatability and reproducibility. In transgenic type II collagen (CII)-immunized HLA-DR1/DR4 humanized mouse models of collagen-induced arthritis (CIA), CII<subscript>259-273</subscript>-specific T cells dominantly expand. Therefore antigen-specific T cells recognizing this epitope presented by rheumatoid arthritis (RA)-associated risk HLA-DR allomorphs are of interest to understand disease progression and responses to immunotherapy in RA patients. Using HLA-DRB1∗04:01 or ∗01:01-collagen type II (CII)<subscript>259–273</subscript> tetramers, we evaluated parameters influencing precision and reproducibility of an optimized flow cytometry–based method for antigen-specific CD4+ T cells and eight specific subpopulations with and without tetramer positivity. We evaluated specificity, precision, and reproducibility for research environments and non-regulated laboratories. The assay has excellent overall precision with %CV<25% for intra-assay repeatability, inter-analyst precision, and inter-assay reproducibility. The precision of the assay correlated negatively with the cell viability after thawing, indicating that post-thaw viability is a critical parameter for reproducibility. This assay is suitable for longitudinal analysis of treatment response and disease activity outcome in RA patients, and adaptable for translational or immunotherapy clinical trial settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00099104
Volume :
207
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Clinical & Experimental Immunology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
158572309
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/cei/uxab008