Immunogenic epitope panel for accurate detection of non-cross-reactive T cell response to SARS-CoV-2

Author:

Titov AlekseiORCID,Shaykhutdinova ReginaORCID,Shcherbakova Olga V.ORCID,Serdyuk YanaORCID,Sheetikov Savely A.ORCID,Zornikova Ksenia V.ORCID,Maleeva Alexandra V.,Khmelevskaya AlexandraORCID,Dianov Dmitry V.ORCID,Shakirova Naina T.ORCID,Malko Dmitry B.ORCID,Shkurnikov MaximORCID,Nersisyan StepanORCID,Tonevitsky AlexanderORCID,Khamaganova EkaterinaORCID,Ershov Anton V.ORCID,Osipova Elena Y.ORCID,Nikolaev Ruslan V.ORCID,Pershin Dmitry E.ORCID,Vedmedskia Viktoria A.ORCID,Maschan MikhailORCID,Ginanova VictoriaORCID,Efimov Grigory A.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe ongoing COVID-19 pandemic calls for more effective diagnostic tools, and T cell response assessment can serve as an independent indicator of prior COVID-19 exposure while also contributing to a more comprehensive characterization of SARS-CoV-2 immunity. In this study, we systematically assessed the immunogenicity of 118 epitopes with immune cells collected from multiple cohorts of vaccinated, convalescent, and healthy unexposed and SARS-CoV-2 exposed donors. We identified seventy-five immunogenic epitopes, 24 of which were immunodominant. We further confirmed HLA restriction for 49 epitopes, and described association with more than one HLA allele for 14 of these. After excluding two cross-reactive epitopes that generated a response in pre-pandemic samples, we were left with a 73-epitope set that offers excellent diagnostic specificity without losing sensitivity compared to full-length antigens, which evoked a robust cross-reactive response. We subsequently incorporated this set of epitopes into an in vitro diagnostic ‘Corona-T-test’ which achieved a diagnostic accuracy of 95% in a clinical trial. When applied to a cohort of asymptomatic seronegative individuals with a history of prolonged SARS-CoV-2 exposure, this test revealed a lack of specific T cell response combined with strong cross-reactivity to full-length antigens, indicating that abortive infection had occurred in these individuals.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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