PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

High efficiency ex vivo cloning of antigen-specific human effector T cells.

  • Michelle A Neller,
  • Michael H-L Lai,
  • Catherine M Lanagan,
  • Linda E O'Connor,
  • Antonia L Pritchard,
  • Nathan R Martinez,
  • Christopher W Schmidt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0110741
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 11
p. e110741

Abstract

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While cloned T cells are valuable tools for the exploration of immune responses against viruses and tumours, current cloning methods do not allow inferences to be made about the function and phenotype of a clone's in vivo precursor, nor can precise cloning efficiencies be calculated. Additionally, there is currently no general method for cloning antigen-specific effector T cells directly from peripheral blood mononuclear cells, without the need for prior expansion in vitro. Here we describe an efficient method for cloning effector T cells ex vivo. Functional T cells are detected using optimised interferon gamma capture following stimulation with viral or tumour cell-derived antigen. In combination with multiple phenotypic markers, single effector T cells are sorted using a flow cytometer directly into multi-well plates, and cloned using standard, non antigen-specific expansion methods. We provide examples of this novel technology to generate antigen-reactive clones from healthy donors using Epstein-Barr virus and cytomegalovirus as representative viral antigen sources, and from two melanoma patients using autologous melanoma cells. Cloning efficiency, clonality, and retention/loss of function are described. Ex vivo effector cell cloning provides a rapid and effective method of deriving antigen-specific T cells clones with traceable in vivo precursor function and phenotype.