Thunder-DDA-PASEF enables high-coverage immunopeptidomics and is boosted by MSRescore with MSPIP timsTOF fragmentation prediction model.

Fiche publication


Date publication

mars 2024

Journal

Nature communications

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Dr CARAPITO Christine


Tous les auteurs :
Gomez-Zepeda D, Arnold-Schild D, Beyrle J, Declercq A, Gabriels R, Kumm E, Preikschat A, Łącki MK, Hirschler A, Rijal JB, Carapito C, Martens L, Distler U, Schild H, Tenzer S

Résumé

Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I peptide ligands (HLAIps) are key targets for developing vaccines and immunotherapies against infectious pathogens or cancer cells. Identifying HLAIps is challenging due to their high diversity, low abundance, and patient individuality. Here, we develop a highly sensitive method for identifying HLAIps using liquid chromatography-ion mobility-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-IMS-MS/MS). In addition, we train a timsTOF-specific peak intensity MSPIP model for tryptic and non-tryptic peptides and implement it in MSRescore (v3) together with the CCS predictor from ionmob. The optimized method, Thunder-DDA-PASEF, semi-selectively fragments singly and multiply charged HLAIps based on their IMS and m/z. Moreover, the method employs the high sensitivity mode and extended IMS resolution with fewer MS/MS frames (300 ms TIMS ramp, 3 MS/MS frames), doubling the coverage of immunopeptidomics analyses, compared to the proteomics-tailored DDA-PASEF (100 ms TIMS ramp, 10 MS/MS frames). Additionally, rescoring boosts the HLAIps identification by 41.7% to 33%, resulting in 5738 HLAIps from as little as one million JY cell equivalents, and 14,516 HLAIps from 20 million. This enables in-depth profiling of HLAIps from diverse human cell lines and human plasma. Finally, profiling JY and Raji cells transfected to express the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein results in 16 spike HLAIps, thirteen of which have been reported to elicit immune responses in human patients.

Mots clés

Humans, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, methods, Peptides, chemistry, Spike Glycoprotein, Coronavirus, Chromatography, Liquid, Histocompatibility Antigens Class I, genetics

Référence

Nat Commun. 2024 03 13;15(1):2288