Key Points
Less immunogenic FVIII muteins were designed by defining and replacing MHCII anchor residues with amino acids that reduced MHCII binding.
Patient-derived T-cell clones show lower proliferation in response to FVIII-F2196K, which had normal FVIII activity and expression level.
Abstract
Factor VIII (FVIII)–neutralizing antibodies (inhibitors) are a serious complication in hemophilia A (HA). The peptide FVIII2194-2213 contains an immunodominant HLA-DRA*01-DRB1*01:01 (DRB1*01:01)-restricted epitope recognized by CD4+ T-effector cells from HA subjects. The aim of this study was to identify amino acid substitutions to deimmunize this epitope while retaining procoagulant function and expression levels comparable to those of wild-type (WT) FVIII proteins. The shortest DRB1*01:01-binding peptide was FVIII2194-2205, and residues important for affinity were identified as F2196, M2199, A2201, and S2204. T-cell proliferation experiments with Ala-substituted FVIII2194-2205 peptides identified F2196A as a substitution that abrogated proliferation of clones specific for the WT sequence. T-cell clones that were stimulated by recombinant WT-FVIII-C2 (rWT-FVIII-C2) protein did not proliferate when cultured with rFVIII-C2-F2196A, indicating the immunogenic peptide includes a naturally processed T-cell epitope. Additional amino acid substitutions at F2196 and M2199 were evaluated by peptide-MHC class II (MHCII)–binding assays, T-cell proliferation assays, epitope prediction algorithms, and sequence homologies. Six B-domain–deleted (BDD)-FVIII proteins with substitutions F2196A, F2196L, F2196K, M2199A, M2199W, or M2199R were produced. Proliferation of T-cell clones and polyclonal lines in response to rBDD-FVIII-F2196K and rBDD-FVIII-M2199A was reduced compared with responses to WT-BDD-FVIII. The BDD-FVIII-F2196K sequence modification appears to be the most promising sequence variant tested here, due to its effectiveness at eliminating DRB1*01:01-restricted immunogenicity, low potential immunogenicity in the context of other MHCII alleles, expression level comparable to WT-BDD-FVIII, and retained procoagulant activity. These results provide proof of principle for the design of less immunogenic FVIII proteins targeted to specific subsets of HA patients.
Introduction
Hemophilia A (HA) is a bleeding disorder caused by factor VIII (FVIII) deficiency. The reduction of FVIII procoagulant cofactor activity compared with normal (100%) activity determines the severity of HA, which is categorized as mild (>5%-40%), moderate (1%-5%), or severe (<1%).1,2 Bleeding is best managed with FVIII replacement therapy, however, FVIII-neutralizing antibodies (“inhibitors”) develop in up to 40% of severe3 and ∼13% of mild/moderately severe4 HA patients, often resulting in significant morbidity and an ongoing risk of uncontrolled bleeds.2,5
Antibody development is initiated when FVIII is internalized and processed by professional antigen-presenting cells and FVIII peptides are presented by major histocompatibility complex class II (MHCII) proteins to T-cell receptors (TCRs) on CD4+ T-effector cells.6-10 Binding of antigenic peptides to a particular MHCII is dictated by polymorphisms in 4 or 5 major pockets within its peptide-binding groove. Peptide side chains at relative “anchor” positions 1, 4, 6, 7, and 9 bind to these pockets, with size, shape, and charge or hydrophobic complementarity determining their affinity.11-13 Recognition of MHCII-peptide complexes by specific TCR, in the context of costimulatory engagement, results in T-cell activation and proliferation. Activated T-effectors traffic to B-cell follicles where they engage with B cells via MHCII-peptide-TCR interactions and induce germinal center formation, wherein activated B cells proliferate and terminally differentiate into anti-FVIII antibody-secreting plasma cells.
An immunodominant HLA-DRA*01-DRB1*01:01 (abbreviated DRB1*01:01)-restricted epitope within overlapping peptides FVIII2186-2205 and FVIII2194-2213 (legacy FVIII numbering,14 sequence: SYFTNMFATWSPSKARLHLQ) was identified in 3 HA subjects.15-17 This allele is found in ∼8% to 9% of whites and ∼1% to 7% of other racial/ethnic groups in the United States.18 The epitope was first identified by MHCII tetramer-guided epitope mapping using peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from a mild HA subject with an A2201P missense substitution who developed a high-titer inhibitor.15 His brother, who had a subclinical inhibitor, also had CD4+ T cells that responded to these 2 peptides but differed in their T-helper phenotype.16,19 Interestingly, tetramer-guided epitope mapping carried out using tetramers loaded with peptides spanning the FVIII-A2, C1, and C2-domains for a severe HA subject with a large F8 gene deletion and a persistent inhibitor identified only this 1 high-affinity epitope.17 Thirty T-cell clones and 5 polyclonal lines specific for this epitope were isolated from these 3 subjects and their TCRB genes sequenced, revealing that the FVIII-specific cells that bound DRB1*01:01-FVIII2194-2213 tetramers with high avidity had a highly oligoclonal TCR repertoire.17
Removal of T-cell epitopes in FVIII through strategic sequence modifications, sometimes termed “deimmunization,” may be an effective strategy to reduce the incidence of FVIII-neutralizing antibodies.20 Jones et al initiated this approach by modifying a promiscuous epitope, FVIII2098-2112, recognized by highly expanded CD4+ T cells from 1 HA and 1 healthy control donor.21 Epitope modification has been explored for other biotherapeutics including erythropoietin,22 interferon-β (IFN-β),23 staphylokinase,24 β-lactamase,25 antibodies,26 and anti-cancer immunotoxins.27-31 Herein, experiments to nullify an immunodominant DRB1*01:01-restricted T-cell epitope in FVIII are described.
Materials and methods
Human subjects and T-cell clones
Subjects were enrolled in “Genetic Studies in Hemophilia and von Willebrand Disease” (GS1) and provided informed consent according to the principles of Helsinki. Protocols were approved by the Seattle Children’s Hospital, University of Washington, and Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences Institutional Review Boards. HA subjects GS1-17A, GS1-32A, and GS1-56A were described previously.15-17,19 All T-cell clones and polyclonal lines from these subjects were DRB1*01:01-restricted and were specific for an epitope within overlapping peptides FVIII2186-2205 and FVIII2194-2213. Clones and polyclonal lines were expanded by stimulation with irradiated PBMCs from an HLA-mismatched individual plus phytohemagglutinin (Thermo Scientific Remel) in the presence of human interleukin-2 (IL-2; Hemagen Diagnostics, Columbia, MD) in T-cell medium (RPMI 1640 with 25 mM N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N′-2-ethanesulfonic acid [HEPES], 15% human serum [MP Biomedicals, Solon, OH], 2 mM L-glutamine, 50 U/mL penicillin, 50 μg/mL streptomycin) as described.17 Blood samples were also obtained from DRB1*01:01-mismatched and DRB1*01:01-matched healthy controls. PBMCs were obtained by Ficoll-Paque PLUS (GE Healthcare Bio-Sciences, Marlborough, MA) underlay and either frozen in 7% dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO; Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) in fetal bovine serum (FBS; GE Healthcare Bio-Sciences HyClone) or used immediately.
FVIII peptides and MHCII-peptide binding
FVIII2194-2213 and FVIII peptides truncated and/or with sequence modifications, as well as reference peptides, were obtained from commercial vendors (Mimotopes, Clayton, VIC, Australia; Global Peptide Inc, Ft. Collins, CO; Synpep, Dublin, CA; Anaspec, Fremont, CA). Molecular weights were confirmed by mass spectrometry. Ten recombinant HLA-DR proteins and reference non-FVIII peptides with known MHCII-binding affinities are listed in supplemental Table 1. Affinities of FVIII peptides for the HLA-DR proteins were determined by competition assays using these reference peptides as described.15,32-34 MHCII-peptide–binding FVIII sequences were also predicted using ProPred35 and Immune Epitope Database (IEDB)36,37 algorithms. MHCII-binding motifs within these sequences were predicted using the SYFPEITHI database.38
Bioinformatics
FVIII and FV protein sequences were obtained from the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) reference sequence database (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/refseq/) and were aligned using Clustal Omega.39
Recombinant FVIII-C2 and recombinant BDD-FVIII proteins
Amino acid substitution F2196A was introduced into a pET16b/wild-type (WT) FVIII-C2 plasmid containing a His tag using QuikChange II site-directed mutagenesis (Agilent, Santa Clara, CA), and proteins were expressed in Origami B(DE3)pLysS cells (EMD Millipore, Billerica, MA) and purified using a Ni-charged column (EMD Millipore) as described.40 The purification procedure included a wash step with buffer containing 0.1% Triton X-114 to remove endotoxins.41 Purified proteins were dialyzed into sterile Ca++/Mg++-free Dulbecco's phosphate-buffered saline (D-PBS) containing 5% glycerol. Endotoxin levels were tested with the ToxinSensor Chromogenic LAL endotoxin assay kit (GenScript Corporation, Piscataway, NJ).
B-domain–deleted (BDD)-FVIII muteins with single amino acid substitutions F2196A, F2196L, F2196K, M2199A, M2199W, or M2199R were stably expressed in BHK-M cells42 as described in supplemental Methods. Briefly, mutations were introduced with splicing by overlap extension43 using the primers in Table 1 and products cloned into HSQ/AvrII/ReNeo.44-46 Cells were expanded with Dulbecco's modified Eagle medium/F12 medium with L-glutamine and HEPES supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum, 50 U/mL penicillin, 50 μg/mL streptomycin, and 100 μg/mL geneticin. Upon reaching ≥70% confluency, cells were washed with Ca++/Mg++-free D-PBS and transferred to AIM-V serum-free medium (Thermo Fisher Scientific) to collect supernatants. Proteins were purified by ion exchange and assayed for FVIII activity.45
Antigen-presentation assays
FVIII peptides (0.01-100 μM) and FVIII-C2 domain proteins (1-1000 nM) were added to 100 000 irradiated PBMCs from a donor with the DRB1*01:01 allele. After a 4-hour incubation at 37°C, T-cell clones (10 000) were added to each well. At 48 hours, 50 μL of supernatant was removed for cytokine analysis and replaced with [3H]thymidine (1 μCi per well) in T-cell medium. Cells were harvested after 18 hours of further incubation and [3H]thymidine incorporation was measured as described.16 IFN-γ and IL-4 in cell supernatants were measured by sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) as described.32 Fifty percent effective concentration (EC50) values (concentration at which half-maximal levels occur) were determined with Systat (Systat Software, San Jose, CA) using a 3-parameter sigmoid model. Stimulation indices were calculated by dividing the counts per minute (cpm) of [3H]thymidine incorporated in antigen-stimulated cells by the cpm of unstimulated cells.
Immature monocyte-derived dendritic cells (iMo-DCs) from a DRB1*01:01 donor were generated in vitro from CD14+ cells as an alternative source of antigen-presenting cells (supplemental Methods). BDD-FVIII proteins (1.6-50 nM) were added to 5000 irradiated iMo-DCs. After a 4-hour incubation at 37°C with antigen, iMo-DCs were washed twice and resuspended in T-cell medium. T-cell clones (50 000) and antigen-pulsed iMo-DCs were incubated together. At 48 hours, 50 μL of supernatant was removed from each well and replaced with [3H]thymidine (1 μCi per well) in T-cell medium. Cells were harvested after 18 hours of further incubation, [3H]thymidine incorporation was measured, and stimulation indices calculated.
FVIII activity and ELISAs
To measure BDD-FVIII activity in cell supernatants, BHK-M cells were first washed with Ca++/Mg++-free D-PBS to remove serum-containing medium and transferred to AIM-V serum-free medium when ≥70% confluent. Cell supernatants were collected 1 day later, centrifuged to pellet and remove the remaining cells, and stored as aliquots at −80°C. FVIII activity was measured with 1- and 2-stage coagulation assays47 (supplemental Methods) and with a chromogenic assay using the Chromogenix COAMATIC Factor VIII kit (DiaPharma) following the microplate method. BDD-FVIII expression levels were measured using a sandwich ELISA with anti-human FVIII ESH-4 (Sekisui Diagnostics, Lexington, MA) and biotinylated anti-human FVIII ESH-8 (Sekisui Diagnostics) as the coating and detection antibodies, respectively (supplemental Methods).
Results
Mapping the minimal DRB1*01:01-restricted binding anchors and TCR contact sites
The ProPred and IEDB algorithms predicted the same minimal 9-residue DRB1*01:01-restricted binding sequence at FVIII2196-2204.17 To test this prediction, serial N-terminal and C-terminal truncations of FVIII2194-2213 were tested for DRB1*01:01 affinity by competition assays. FVIII2194-2204 affinity was reduced >10-fold compared with FVIII2194-2205, and that of FVIII2195-2206 was >10-fold reduced compared with FVIII2194-2206, indicating that the minimal peptide for high-affinity binding to recombinant DRB1*01:01 (rDRB1*01:01) is the 12-residue sequence FVIII2194-2205 (Figure 1).
The SYFPEITHI database indicated that the binding anchor residues to DRB1*01:01 pockets 1, 4, 6, and 9 were F2196, M2199, A2201, and S2204. This prediction was tested systematically using FVIII2194-2205 peptides substituted with Arg (Figure 2A) or Ala (Figure 2B) at each possible position. More than 10-fold reduced binding to rDRB1*01:01 was seen for peptides with the following substitutions: F2196R, M2199R, A2201R, S2204R, F2196A, and M2199A, thereby confirming the predicted DRB1*01:01-restricted anchor residues.
FVIII2194-2205 peptides with alanine substitutions at each position were next tested for immunogenicity by measuring T-cell proliferation and cytokine secretion of patient-derived T-cell clones having distinct TCRBV sequences17 (Table 2; Figure 3). Cytokine secretion results generally mirrored proliferation (supplemental Figure 1), identifying Y2195, T2197, N2198, F2200, T2202, and W2203 (relative peptide [p] positions p-1, p2, p3, p5, p7, and p8) as TCR contact residues. Only the substitution F2196A (MHCII anchor residue 1) abrogated immune responses of all clones.
Strategy for designing less immunogenic rFVIII-C2 and BDD-FVIII proteins
Our primary goal was to design FVIII muteins with amino acid substitutions that would block MHCII binding without significantly reducing procoagulant activity. The rFVIII-C2 crystal structure48 revealed that the FVIII-F2196 side chain interacts with T2202, stabilizing a β turn at a FVIII membrane-binding region, suggesting that substitution F2196A might not be optimum for preserving function. Therefore, 20 FVIII2194-2205 peptides, containing each possible amino acid at position 2196, were evaluated for DRB1*01:01-restricted immunogenicity by measuring affinity for rDRB1*01:01 and proliferation of T-cell clone 32A-18. Binding and proliferation assay results were broadly consistent (Figure 4A-B). Eleven of the substitutions reduced the affinity ≥100-fold relative to that of the WT peptide, and 7 abrogated T-cell proliferation.
The predicted effects of amino acid substitutions at anchor residue 4, M2199, on MHCII affinities were evaluated using the ProPred and IEDB algorithms, identifying candidates for substitutions to decrease affinities for DRB1*01:01 (Table 3). In addition, the human FVIII sequence was aligned with FVIII sequences from other species, and with the homologous human factor V sequence,49 to determine the conservation of amino acids F2196 and M2199 (Figure 4C). Finally, a literature search identified 3 FVIII proteins with substitutions at amino acids F2196 and M2199 that retained FVIII procoagulant function: BDD-FVIII-M2199I,50 BDD-FVIII-M2199A,51 and BDD-FVIII-F2196L.52 On the basis of all of these results, amino acid substitutions F2196A, F2196L, F2196K, M2199A, M2199W, and M2199R were selected as potential sequence modifications and the corresponding peptides were screened for their binding to a series of recombinant HLA proteins as an indicator of their potential immunogenicity.
Binding promiscuity of FVIII2194-2205 and modified peptides to MHCII
MHCII affinities of WT and sequence-modified peptides within FVIII2182-2213 were predicted using ProPred and IEDB algorithms. This FVIII region spans all possible 15-mer sequences that include the proposed amino acid substitution sites at F2196 or M2199 (MHCII anchor residues 1 and 4). The ProPred algorithm predicted that, with an affinity threshold of 3% (the recommended cutoff for physiologically relevant affinities), WT, F2196L-, and M2199W-substituted peptides would bind to 12, 8, and 5 HLA-DR, respectively, of 51 HLA-DR proteins for which quantitative matrices are available; that F2196A and F2196K substitutions would prevent binding to all 51 HLA-DR; and that M2199A- and M2199R-substituted peptides would bind to 2 HLA-DR each (Table 4). Therefore, all 6 substitutions were predicted to reduce MHCII-binding promiscuity relative to the WT sequence. Substitutions F2196L, M2199W, and M2199R were predicted to increase affinity for 1 to 4 of the 51 MHCII alleles in the database. The IEDB predictions were run using the HLA class II reference set, which contains representative alleles for ∼99% of the human population. Results were in good agreement with ProPred in predicting high-affinity binding to DRB1*01:01, DRB1*0401, DRB1*04:05, and DRB5*01:01, which were included in reference databases for both programs (Table 5). The IEDB method predicted high-affinity binding of the WT peptides to an additional 11 MHCII alleles, and the proposed sequence modifications were predicted to eliminate high-affinity binding to 3 to 6 of these MHCII alleles. Increased affinities for 0 to 2 MHCII alleles per sequence modification were also predicted.
Affinities of the minimal epitope FVIII2194-2205 for 10 recombinant HLA-DR proteins were determined experimentally using a competitive binding assay. FVIII2194-2205 bound strongly to DRB1*01:01, with moderate affinity to DRB1*15:01 and DRB1*10:01, and weakly to DRB1*04:01, DRB1*04:04, and DRB1*09:01. The F2196A, F2196K, and M2199R-substituted peptides had 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) values >50 μM for each HLA-DR protein tested, whereas the M2199A-substituted peptide bound with moderate affinity only to DRB1*09:01, weakly to DRB1*01:01 and DRB1*03:01, and with IC50 values >50 μM for all other tested HLA-DR proteins (Table 6). The binding results suggested that all 6 substitutions would reduce MHCII-binding promiscuity, as increased affinity was observed only for DRB1*09:01 binding to the M2199A-substituted peptide. Therefore, rBDD-FVIII proteins with these 6 sequence modifications were designed and produced.
Immunogenicity of WT vs sequence-modified rFVIII-C2
As proof of principle, and to test whether the DRB1*01:01-restricted epitope identified using peptide assays was also a naturally processed epitope, rFVIII-C2 and rFVIII-C2-F2196A were generated, purified (supplemental Figure 2), and tested for immunogenicity. The endotoxin level in the purified samples was 0.20 endotoxin units (EU)/mL, comparable to the low level in the human serum used in the T-cell medium. Immunogenicity was evaluated by culturing the proteins with 4 patient-derived T-cell clones (Figure 5). All 4 clones showed dose-responsive proliferation in response to rFVIII-C2 but not rFVIII-C2-F2196A.
Expression, function, and immunogenicity of BDD-FVIII muteins
BDD-FVIII muteins F2196A, F2196L, F2196K, M2199A, M2199W, and M2199R were generated and the activities of the 3 highest-expressing cell lines per protein determined (supplemental Figures 3 and 4A). Specific activities are in Table 7 and supplemental Figure 4. Median specific activities were similar to WT-BDD-FVIII–specific activity for all muteins except F2196A.
WT-BDD-FVIII and BDD-FVIII-F2196K and -M2199A were highly purified (supplemental Figure 5) and had specific activities of ∼10 000 IU/mg53 (Table 7). These proteins, and T-cell clones and polyclonal lines from 3 inhibitor subjects, were used to test whether the DRB1*01:01-restricted immunogenicity of BDD-FVIII was decreased by sequence modifications F2196K and M2199A. The polyclonal T-cell lines 17A-5YR-L1 and 56A-L217 and T-cell clones 32A-18, 17A-19WK-11, and 17A-21MO-5, were cultured with these proteins with DRB1*01:01-matched antigen-presenting cells (supplemental Figure 6). All clones and lines proliferated in a dose-dependent manner to WT-BDD-FVIII, as expected, whereas the responses to BDD-FVIII-F2196K and BDD-FVIII-M2199A were greatly reduced (Figure 6).
Discussion
Development of inhibitors in response to FVIII replacement therapy is the most serious complication in the treatment of HA. Whether alloimmunization occurs is dependent on the degree of structural difference between therapeutic FVIII and the patient’s endogenous, dysfunctional FVIII protein (if any protein is expressed), on additional genetic variations, and on environmental factors including intensity of FVIII treatment and inflammatory status of the patient. CD4+ T cells are critical to the production and maintenance of inhibitors, as demonstrated by the observation that HIV+ HA patients experienced declines in inhibitor titers that were, unfortunately, reversed when T-cell levels rebounded with effective antiretroviral therapy.54 Attenuation of CD4+ T-effector help, therefore, is a promising strategy to prevent or reverse anti-FVIII antibody responses. This may be accomplished by manipulating the cellular response, for example, by expanding natural or engineered regulatory T cells55 or, alternatively, by modifying the immunogenicity of the antigen itself. This study explores the potential use of the latter approach.
An important consideration in assessing the feasibility of deimmunization strategies through modification of T-cell epitopes is the number of immunodominant epitopes that drive initial anti-FVIII immune responses and that maintain persistent inhibitor titers. Epitope mapping of T-cell epitopes recognized by humanized (DRB1*15:01) FVIII-KO mice identified 8 immunodominant epitopes in multiple FVIII domains.56 In a recent study of a severe HA subject with a persistent high-titer inhibitor, MHCII tetramer-based epitope mapping to evaluate the immunogenicity of peptides spanning the FVIII A2, C1, and C2 domains revealed a highly oligoclonal CD4+ T-cell response to only 1 epitope (there was insufficient blood available to test responses to peptides spanning the entire FVIII sequence). This subject had a multiexon F8 gene deletion and had failed immune tolerance induction (ITI) therapy.17 There is still no adequate murine model of human ITI protocols; however, these earlier results suggest that functional peripheral tolerance to FVIII is achieved, in part, through deletion and anergy of initially responsive CD4+ T-cell clones. This in turn suggests that identification and modification of only a small set of immunodominant T-cell epitopes in FVIII may be a feasible strategy to avoid stimulating T-effector cells that can initiate or maintain inhibitor responses.20,57 Each sequence modification has the potential to compromise FVIII activity and/or generate a neoepitope that could have the opposite of the desired effect on FVIII immunogenicity. Porcine FVIII has proven an effective “bypass” therapy to stabilize hemostasis in some inhibitor patients, however, subsequent immune responses to porcine FVIII may develop, thereby negating its clinical benefits.58,59 Strategic amino acid substitutions in immunodominant T-cell epitopes with known HLA restriction would, in principle, be less likely to provoke additional neutralizing antibodies. In other words, the principles of precision medicine could be applied to design less immunogenic FVIII proteins targeted to HA patients with specific HLA alleles.
Toward the goal of generating less immunogenic FVIII proteins, the present study identifies the precise binding mode of an immunodominant T-cell epitope15-17,19 in FVIII to DRB1*01:01 and tests the effects of sequence modifications to disrupt MHCII binding while preserving FVIII procoagulant function. To systematically test the effects of amino acid sequence modifications within the minimal epitope, FVIII2194-2205, peptides with Ala or Arg at every possible position, or with 20 different amino acids substituted for anchor residue 1 (F2196), were synthesized. IC50 values for the substituted peptides clearly established the DRB1*01:01 anchor residues (F2196, M2199, A2201, and S2204) and identified additional substitutions of F2196 that would prevent or reduce the affinity for DRB1*01:01. Prediction algorithms further suggested substitutions of M2199 that could interfere with productive MHCII binding.
The MHCII anchor residues identified were consistent with the known properties of the DRB1*01:01 peptide-binding groove that were determined by crystallization with the high-affinity peptide HA306-318.11 The anchor residue at position 1 plays a major role in contributing affinities of peptides for most HLA-DR alleles. The specificity of this pocket is dictated by the Gly/Val dimorphism at β86.11-13,60-62 HLA-DR alleles with β86Gly, including DRB1*01:01, allow primarily large hydrophobic aromatic residues at position 1 and large aliphatic residues secondarily, whereas HLA-DR alleles with β86Val have the reverse specificities. Accordingly, F2196 was found to be critical for DRB1*01:01 affinity and for the CD4+ T-cell response. Binding of F2196-substituted peptides to DRB1*01:01 showed the expected preference for large hydrophobic/aromatic amino acids.
To test effects of amino acid substitutions on immunogenicity, 5 patient-derived T-cell clones with distinct TCRs were cultured with antigen-presenting cells from a donor with a DRB1*01:01 allele and FVIII2194-2205 peptides having an Ala substitution at each position. Only the F2196A substitution abrogated proliferation of all 5 clones, whereas the M2199A substitution reduced or abrogated proliferation of the same clones. Ala substitutions of non-MHCII-anchor residues had variable effects on proliferation, consistent with the diverse TCR sequences.17 The substitution F2196A in a recombinant FVIII-C2 protein abrogated proliferation of T-cell clones, clearly demonstrating that the epitope identified by MHCII tetramer mapping and peptide-DRB1*01:01–binding assays is indeed a physiologically relevant, naturally processed epitope.
Six FVIII sequence modifications at DRB1*01:01 anchor residues 1 and 4, each having a lower predicted DRB1*01:01-restricted immunogenicity than the WT sequence, were chosen based on binding and T-cell assay results and predictions and homologies with other FVIII proteins. Binding of WT and sequence-modified FVIII peptides to additional MHCII was tested directly using 10 recombinant HLA-DRB1 proteins and was evaluated for additional HLA class II alleles using the IEDB36,37 and ProPred35 prediction algorithms. The IEDB HLA class II reference set corresponds to a panel of the most frequent MHCII loci worldwide.18,63 Most substitutions evaluated were predicted to lower MHCII-binding promiscuity. However, several substitutions that could increase the affinities for specific MHCII were identified, which could conceivably result in presentation of neoepitopes. The IEDB and ProPred algorithms performed well in predicting which substitutions would disrupt binding to DRB1*01:01 (supplemental Table 2), however, the correlations between IC50 values and predicted affinities were poor (supplemental Figure 7).
The 6 BDD-FVIII muteins described here each retained at least half of the specific activity of WT-FVIII. Purified BDD-FVIII-F2196K and BDD-FVIII-M2199A bound effectively to von Willebrand factor53 and had specific activities similar to those reported for rWT-FVIII preparations.46,64-66 These 2 amino acid substitutions profoundly reduced the proliferation of patient-derived CD4+ T-cell clones and polyclonal lines that were specific for the WT FVIII2194-2205 epitope. The BDD-FVIII-F2196K sequence modification appears to be the most promising sequence modification tested here, due to its effectiveness at eliminating DRB1*01:01-restricted immunogenicity, its low potential immunogenicity restricted to additional representative MHCII alleles, an expression level comparable to WT-BDD-FVIII, and its retained procoagulant activity. Furthermore, the F2196K substitution prevented neutralization of FVIII activity by the inhibitory antibodies BO2C11 and 1B5,53 suggesting that it may also avoid stimulation of relevant naive and/or memory B cells.
The present study demonstrates effective removal of an immunodominant DRB1*01:01-restricted T-cell epitope in FVIII. Future experiments will test for reduced immunogenicity and antigenicity of sequence-modified FVIII proteins using human PBMCs and animal models. Some recently introduced therapeutic FVIII proteins have extended half-lives achieved through conjugation to Fc67 or polyethylene glycol,67,68 or sequence modifications to generate a single-chain FVIII,69 etc. The effects of these modifications on immunogenicity are subjects of ongoing research. As epitope-mapping efforts are applied to additional HA subjects, FVIII sequence modifications to remove immunodominant epitopes may be incorporated into precision medicine strategies to match individual patients with optimal therapeutic FVIII proteins.
Potential limitations of our FVIII deimmunization approach include the possibility that subdominant epitopes could drive new inhibitor responses following infusions with a rationally sequence-modified FVIII. Animal model studies are required to test this possibility in the context of FVIII immunogenicity. An earlier study of sequence-modified IFN-β did not identify emerging subdominant epitopes following removal of 1 immunodominant epitope,23 which is encouraging. Some epitopes may consist of residues that cannot be modified without compromising FVIII procoagulant function, and generating multiple sequence-modified FVIII proteins would be costly. Memory B cells are critical to maintenance of inhibitors, and it remains to be seen whether decreasing the T-effector response to FVIII will also significantly reduce inhibitor titers. Mapping and modifying B-cell epitopes also remains a priority, especially in designing less antigenic proteins as potential therapeutics for patients with an existing inhibitor.
The full-text version of this article contains a data supplement.
Acknowledgments
The authors thank Charles Cooper, Mark Bray, and Colette Norby-Slycord for enrolling subjects; Shelley Fletcher for sequencing; the Benaroya Research Institute Tetramer Core for producing HLA-DR proteins; Pete Lollar, John Healey, and Ernest Parker for the FVIII expression system and technical support; Douglas Bolgiano for statistical assistance; and David W. Scott and Ai-Hong Zhang for critical reading of the manuscript. The authors thank all subjects for their generous blood donations.
This work was supported by an Investigator-Initiated Research award from Pfizer (study identification no. WS1907291) (K.P.P.). Additional funding was from National Institutes of Health, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute grants 1RC2-HL101851 and 1R01-HL-130448 and Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences startup funding (K.P.P.), and from National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute grant R01-07109 (A.R.T.). J.A.L. was supported by an American Society of Hematology trainee award; all of J.A.L.’s work on this project was carried out while employed or volunteering at the Puget Sound Blood Center (Seattle, WA).
Pfizer had no role in the study design, data collection, statistical analysis, interpretation, or writing of the manuscript. Shire had no role in the work, or in the writing or publication of this project.
The opinions or assertions contained herein are the private ones of the authors and are not to be construed as official or reflecting the views of the Department of Defense or the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences.
Authorship
Contribution: K.P.P. is responsible for the content of the manuscript and the decision to submit for publication; R.A.E., E.A.J., A.R.T., and K.P.P. conceived and designed experiments; R.A.E., J.A.L., D.G., and K.P. performed experiments; A.R.T. and K.P.P. enrolled subjects; E.A.J. contributed reagents; R.A.E., J.A.L., D.G., K.P., and K.P.P. analyzed data; R.A.E. and K.P.P. wrote the paper; and all authors reviewed the manuscript.
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: K.P.P., R.A.E., and E.A.J. are inventors on FVIII patents. J.A.L. is currently an employee of Shire. The remaining authors declare no competing financial interests.
Correspondence: Kathleen P. Pratt, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, 4301 Jones Bridge Rd, Bethesda, MD 20814; e-mail: kathleen.pratt@usuhs.edu.