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Peptide receptive HLA class I molecules allowing you to make your own custom peptide-HLA complexes.

HLA-A1101 easYmers®

Catalog no.
1018-01
Group
HLA-A
Alpha chain
HLA-A1101
Beta chain
b2m
Peptide
ALNTITNLK
Peptide source
YFV NS5 610-618
Format
easYmer
Storage
-20°C
Buffer
TRIS/MALEATE pH 7
Shelf life
18 Months
Application
easYmers® are peptide receptive HLA class I molecules which can be used to generate peptide HLA (pHLA) monomers with your choice of peptide. The monomers can easily be tetramerized with fluorophore conjugated streptavidin and used to analyse T cells by flowcytometry. The easYmer reagent can also be used to evaluate specific pHLA I interactions.
Concentration
3000 nM
For Research Use Only (RUO)

Published Research using immunAware reagents and services

24/04/2024

Frontiers in immunology

Refined analytical pipeline for the pharmacodynamic assessment of T-cell responses to vaccine antigens

Pharmacodynamic assessment of T-cell-based cancer immunotherapies often focus on detecting rare circulating T-cell populations. The therapy-induced immune cells in blood-derived clinical samples are often present in very low frequencies and with the currently available T-cell analytical assays, amplification of the cells of interest prior to analysis is often required. Current approaches aiming to enrich antigen-specific T cells from human Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells (PBMCs) depend on in vitro culturing in presence of their cognate peptides and cytokines. In the present work, we improved a standard, publicly available protocol for T-cell immune analyses based on the in vitro expansion of T cells. We used PBMCs from healthy subjects and well-described viral antigens as a model system for optimizing the experimental procedures and conditions. Using the standard protocol, we first demonstrated significant enrichment of antigen-specific T cells, even when their starting frequency ex vivo was low. Importantly, this amplification occurred with high specificity, with no or neglectable enrichment of irrelevant T-cell clones being observed in the cultures. Testing of modified culturing timelines suggested that the protocol can be adjusted accordingly to allow for greater cell yield with strong preservation of the functionality of antigen-specific T cells. Overall, our work has led to the refinement of a standard protocol for in vitro stimulation of antigen-specific T cells and highlighted its reliability and reproducibility. We envision that the optimized protocol could be applied for longitudinal monitoring of rare blood-circulating T cells in scenarios with limited sample material.

14/10/2024

Journal for immunotherapy of cancer

Intratumoral STING agonist reverses immune evasion in PD-(L)1-refractory Merkel cell carcinoma: mechanistic insights from detailed biomarker analyses

Antibodies blocking programmed death (PD)-1 or its ligand (PD-L1) have revolutionized cancer care, but many patients do not experience durable benefits. Novel treatments to stimulate antitumor immunity are needed in the PD-(L)1 refractory setting. The stimulator of interferon genes (STING) protein, an innate sensor of cytoplasmic DNA, is a promising target with several agonists in development. However, response rates in most recent clinical trials have been low and mechanisms of response remain unclear. We report detailed biomarker analyses in a patient with anti-PD-L1 refractory, Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCPyV)-positive, metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) who was treated with an intratumoral (IT) STING agonist (ADU-S100) plus intravenous anti-PD-1 antibody (spartalizumab) and experienced a durable objective response with regression of both injected and non-injected lesions.We analyzed pretreatment and post-treatment tumor and peripheral blood samples from our patient with single-cell RNA sequencing, 30-parameter flow cytometry, T cell receptor sequencing, and multiplexed immunohistochemistry. We analyzed cancer-specific CD8 T cells using human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-I tetramers loaded with MCPyV peptides. We also analyzed STING expression and signaling in the tumor microenvironment (TME) of 88 additional MCC tumor specimens and in MCC cell lines.We observed high levels of MCPyV-specific T cells (12% of T cells) in our patient's tumor at baseline. These cancer-specific CD8 T cells exhibited characteristics of exhaustion including high TOX and low TCF1 proteins. Following treatment with STING-agonist plus anti-PD-1, IT CD8 T cells expanded threefold. We also observed evidence of likely improved antigen presentation in the MCC TME (greater than fourfold increase of HLA-I-positive cancer cells). STING expression was not detected in any cancer cells within our patient's tumor or in 88 other MCC tumors, however high STING expression was observed in immune and stromal cells within all 89 MCC tumors.Our results suggest that STING agonists may be able to work indirectly in MCC via signaling through immune and stromal cells in the TME, and may not necessarily need STING expression in the cancer cells. This approach may be particularly effective in tumors that are already infiltrated by inflammatory cells in the TME but are evading immune detection via HLA-I downregulation.