PhD defence by Yogesh Basavaraju

PhD defence by Yogesh Basavaraju

When

17. jun 2024 13:00 - 16:00

Where

Bldg. 303, aud. 43

Host

DTU Health Tech

PhD defence

PhD defence by Yogesh Basavaraju

On Monday 17 June 2024, Yogesh Basavaraju will defend his PhD thesis "Develop and validate novel MHC-II-based T cell detection technologies to interrogate CD4 T cell reactivity and determine key characteristics of neoepitope immunogenicity".

Time & place: 13:00, building 303, aud. 43

Principal supervisor: Professor Sine Reker Hadrup
Co-supervisor: Tripti Tamhane

Assessment committee:
Professor Peter Heegaard, DTU Health Tech
Professor Sebastian Springer, Constructor University Bremen
Professor Christian Freund, Freie University Berlin

Chairperson:
Associate Professor Sunil Kumar Saini, DTU Health Tech

Abstract:

The human immune system is a complex network that plays a role in body’s defense against pathogens and cancer. It comprises of innate and adaptive immunity. Adaptive immunity comprises of lymphocytes – T cells and B cells. Two types of T cells – CD8 T cells (cytotoxic) and CD4 T cells (T-helper cells) play an important role in cancer and infections. The T cells detect antigens that are presented on major histocompatibility complex (MHC), and upon recognizing the antigen-MHC complex they are activated, thus eliciting an immune response against the antigen. The role of these antigen-specific T cells responding to antigen challenge is a topic of intense studies, and critical for development and mechanistic insight to therapeutic strategies and disease development. Detecting such antigen-specific T cells is important for designing and optimizing therapies.

Large-scale detection technologies developed to asses CD8 T cell detection have not yet been adapted to enable the identification of CD4 T cells at a large scale. Some of the challenges are the availability of soluble MHCII and the ability to load antigens at a large scale to screen for antigen-specific CD4 T cells. Here we have established an MHCII expression and peptide exchange platform in the presence of human leukocyte antigen-DM (HLA-DM). We then used DNA barcodes to mark the peptide-MHCII multimers thereby able to detect CD4 T cell binding by DNA barcoding. We detected viral-specific CD4 T cells and validated them by conventional tetramer staining. This DNA-barcoded technology was also used for screening peptides loaded on MHC class I molecules in the setting of chronic lymphocytic leukemia to detect CD8 T cell responses for peptides derived from B-cell receptor immunoglobulin regions.

All this is possible with the use of soluble reagents, therefore, to address the instability of such soluble heterodimeric reagents we explored a novel approach of using a nanobody (single-domain antibodies) and its epitope as fusion partners in enhancing the functional stability of heterodimers. In nanobody-epitope fused MHCI and MHCII, we demonstrate the enhancement of their ability to detect antigen-specific CD8 and CD4 T cell respectively compared to their wild-type construct.

In conclusion, we contribute to the field of immunology and immunotherapy by providing novel approaches for large-scale screening of antigenic CD4 T cells and using nanobody-epitope fusion to enhance heterodimeric stability.