Antibody-mediated delivery of T-cell epitopes to antigen-presenting cells induce strong CD4 and CD8 T-cell responses.
2021
Targeted delivery of antigen to antigen-presenting cells (APCs) enhances antigen presentation and thus, is a potent strategy for making more efficacious vaccines. This can be achieved by use of antibodies with specificity for endocytic surface molecules expressed on the APC. We aimed to compare two different antibody-antigen fusion modes in their ability to induce T-cell responses; first, exchange of immunoglobulin (Ig) constant domain loops with a T-cell epitope (Troybody), and second, fusion of T-cell epitope or whole antigen to the antibody C-terminus. Although both strategies are well-established, they have not previously been compared using the same system. We found that both antibody-antigen fusion modes led to presentation of the T-cell epitope. The strength of the T-cell responses varied, however, with the most efficient Troybody inducing CD4 T-cell proliferation and cytokine secretion at 10-100-fold lower concentration than the antibodies carrying antigen fused to the C-terminus, both in vitro and after intravenous injection in mice. Furthermore, we exchanged this loop with an MHCI-restricted T-cell epitope, and the resulting antibody enabled efficient cross-presentation to CD8 T cells in vivo. Targeting of antigen to APCs by use of such antibody-antigen fusions is thus an attractive vaccination strategy for increased activation of both CD4 and CD8 peptide-specific T cells.
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