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Soluble T Cell Receptor Vβ Domains Engineered for High-Affinity Binding to Staphylococcal or Streptococcal Superantigens

Journal

TOXINS
Volume 6, Issue 2, Pages 556-574

Publisher

MDPI AG
DOI: 10.3390/toxins6020556

Keywords

T-cell receptor; complementarity determining regions; yeast display; superantigens; framework regions; affinity maturation; directed evolution

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R43 AI102432, U54 AI57153]

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Staphylococcus aureus and group A Streptococcus secrete a collection of toxins called superantigens (SAgs), so-called because they stimulate a large fraction of an individual's T cells. One consequence of this hyperactivity is massive cytokine release leading to severe tissue inflammation and, in some cases, systemic organ failure and death. The molecular basis of action involves the binding of the SAg to both a T cell receptor (TCR) on a T cell and a class II product of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) on an antigen presenting cell. This cross-linking leads to aggregation of the TCR complex and signaling. A common feature of SAgs is that they bind with relatively low affinity to the variable region (V) of the beta chain of the TCR. Despite this low affinity binding, SAgs are very potent, as each T cell requires only a small fraction of their receptors to be bound in order to trigger cytokine release. To develop high-affinity agents that could neutralize the activity of SAgs, and facilitate the development of detection assays, soluble forms of the V beta regions have been engineered to affinities that are up to 3 million-fold higher for the SAg. Over the past decade, six different V beta regions against SAgs from S. aureus (SEA, SEB, SEC3, TSST-1) or S. pyogenes (SpeA and SpeC) have been engineered for high-affinity using yeast display and directed evolution. Here we review the engineering of these high-affinity V beta proteins, structural features of the six different SAgs and the V beta proteins, and the specific properties of the engineered V beta regions that confer high-affinity and specificity for their SAg ligands.

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