The TNFα-binding domain of the therapeutic antibody adalimumab elicits CD4 T-cell responses in rheumatoid arthritis patients

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Authors
  • Mateusz Makuch
  • Josine van Beek
  • Carla A. Wijbrandts
  • Marja Aalbers
  • Philippe Stas
  • Alexander B. Meijer
  • Anja ten Brinke
  • Theo Rispens
  • Paul Peter Tak
  • Gertjan Wolbink
  • Janine Schuurman
  • Paul W.H.I. Parren
  • Marieke S. van Ham ORCID logo
Publication date 2025
Journal Frontiers in Immunology
Article number 1549781
Volume | Issue number 16
Number of pages 12
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences (SILS)
Abstract
Treatment efficacy of patients receiving anti-TNF antibodies is limited by the formation of anti-drug antibodies. These are observed in most adalimumab-treated rheumatoid arthritis patients, despite the adjuvant-free and human sequence-derived nature of the antibody. The class switched phenotype and high affinity of these antibodies suggest CD4 T-cell involvement in their formation. In this study, we investigated the potential epitopes in the functional domain of adalimumab and assessed their actual HLA II presentation and induction of CD4 T-cell responses in exposed patients. The binding strength of overlapping adalimumab-derived peptides to 27 DR and 14 DQ HLA alleles was predicted in silico. 10 strong and 44 medium-binding 10-mer peptides were identified within the variable regions of the heavy and light chain of adalimumab. HLA-DR-mediated antigen presentation of selected peptides by monocyte-derived dendritic cells was determined by mass spectrometry of the peptide pool eluted from isolated HLA-DR complexes. Binding of the variable region peptides of heavy (H41-62) and light chains (L18-39) was demonstrated. The presence of adalimumab-specific CD4 T-cells in adalimumab-experienced patients was investigated via peptide stimulation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells and assessment of T-cell proliferation. Anti-adalimumab CD4 T-cell responses were observed against four variable region peptides in a group of adalimumab-experienced RA patients. Some of these responses were also present in healthy control donors. This study identifies immunologically relevant CD4 T-cell epitopes in the variable region of the human therapeutic antibody adalimumab based on RA patients’ reactivity. Modification of these epitopes or concomitant therapy that targets or prevents adalimumab-specific T cell responses could be beneficial for patients with significant anti-drug responses.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2025.1549781
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105010905723
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