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Dive into the research topics where Chopie Hassan is active.

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Featured researches published by Chopie Hassan.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2013

The Human Leukocyte Antigen–presented Ligandome of B Lymphocytes

Chopie Hassan; Michel G.D. Kester; Arnoud H. de Ru; Pleun Hombrink; Jan W. Drijfhout; Harm Nijveen; Jack A. M. Leunissen; Mirjam H.M. Heemskerk; J.H. Frederik Falkenburg; Peter A. van Veelen

Peptides presented by human leukocyte antigen (HLA) molecules on the cell surface play a crucial role in adaptive immunology, mediating the communication between T cells and antigen presenting cells. Knowledge of these peptides is of pivotal importance in fundamental studies of T cell action and in cellular immunotherapy and transplantation. In this paper we present the in-depth identification and relative quantification of 14,500 peptide ligands constituting the HLA ligandome of B cells. This large number of identified ligands provides general insight into the presented peptide repertoire and antigen presentation. Our uniquely large set of HLA ligands allowed us to characterize in detail the peptides constituting the ligandome in terms of relative abundance, peptide length distribution, physicochemical properties, binding affinity to the HLA molecule, and presence of post-translational modifications. The presented B-lymphocyte ligandome is shown to be a rich source of information by the presence of minor histocompatibility antigens, virus-derived epitopes, and post-translationally modified HLA ligands, and it can be a good starting point for solving a wealth of specific immunological questions. These HLA ligands can form the basis for reversed immunology approaches to identify T cell epitopes based not on in silico predictions but on the bona fide eluted HLA ligandome.


Molecular Immunology | 2013

Alternative peptide repertoire of HLA-E reveals a binding motif that is strikingly similar to HLA-A2

Margit H. Lampen; Chopie Hassan; Marjolein Sluijter; Annemieke Geluk; Karin Dijkman; Jennifer M.-L. Tjon; Arnoud H. de Ru; Sjoerd H. van der Burg; Peter A. van Veelen; Thorbald van Hall

The non-classical HLA-E is a conserved class I molecule that mainly presents monomorphic leader peptides derived from other HLA class I molecules. These leader peptides comprise an optimized sequence for tight and deep binding into the HLA-E groove. In a TAP-deficient environment, as it can be generated during viral infection or in tumor tissue, loading of the classical leader peptide sequences is hampered leading to an alternative HLA-E peptide repertoire. In this study, we characterized this alternative peptide repertoire using cells in which TAP activity is inhibited. We identified more than 500 unique peptide sequences carried by HLA-E and found that their binding motif is different from the dominant leader peptides. Hydrophobic amino acids were only found at positions 2 and 9, in close resemblance to the peptide binding motif of HLA-A*0201. HLA-E-eluted peptides were indeed able to bind this classical HLA class I molecule. Our findings suggest that the dominant leader peptides uniquely conform to HLA-E, but that in their absence a peptide pool is presented like that of HLA-A*0201.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

Naturally Processed Non-canonical HLA-A*02:01 Presented Peptides.

Chopie Hassan; Eric Chabrol; Lorenz Jahn; Michel G.D. Kester; Arnoud H. de Ru; Jan W. Drijfhout; Jamie Rossjohn; J.H. Frederik Falkenburg; Mirjam H.M. Heemskerk; Stephanie Gras; Peter A. van Veelen

Background: The impact of long epitopes on T-cell immunity remains unclear. Results: We identified and characterized 15-mer epitopes restricted to HLA-A*02:01. Conclusion: HLA-A*02:01, in addition to the HLA-B family, can bind long epitopes that represent new antigenic targets for CD8+ T-cells. Significance: The characterization of 15-mer epitopes restricted to HLA-A*02:01 expands our knowledge of the HLA-ligandome. Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I molecules generally present peptides (p) of 8 to 11 amino acids (aa) in length. Although an increasing number of examples with lengthy (>11 aa) peptides, presented mostly by HLA-B alleles, have been reported. Here we characterize HLA-A*02:01 restricted, in addition to the HLA-B*0702 and HLA-B*4402 restricted, lengthy peptides (>11 aa) arising from the B-cell ligandome. We analyzed a number of 15-mer peptides presented by HLA-A*02:01, and confirmed pHLA-I formation by HLA folding and thermal stability assays. Surprisingly the binding affinity and stability of the 15-mer epitopes in complex with HLA-A*02:01 were comparable with the values observed for canonical length (8 to 11 aa) HLA-A*02:01-restricted peptides. We solved the structures of two 15-mer epitopes in complex with HLA-A*02:01, within which the peptides adopted distinct super-bulged conformations. Moreover, we demonstrate that T-cells can recognize the 15-mer peptides in the context of HLA-A*02:01, indicating that these 15-mer peptides represent immunogenic ligands. Collectively, our data expand our understanding of longer epitopes in the context of HLA-I, highlighting that they are not limited to the HLA-B family, but can bind the ubiquitous HLA-A*02:01 molecule, and play an important role in T-cell immunity.


Journal of Proteomics | 2014

Accurate quantitation of MHC-bound peptides by application of isotopically labeled peptide MHC complexes.

Chopie Hassan; Michel G.D. Kester; Gideon Oudgenoeg; Arnoud H. de Ru; George M. C. Janssen; Jan W. Drijfhout; Robbert M. Spaapen; Connie R. Jimenez; Mirjam H.M. Heemskerk; J.H. Frederik Falkenburg; Peter A. van Veelen

Knowledge of the accurate copy number of HLA class I presented ligands is important in fundamental and clinical immunology. Currently, the best copy number determinations are based on mass spectrometry, employing single reaction monitoring (SRM) in combination with a known amount of isotopically labeled peptide. The major drawback of this approach is that the losses during sample pretreatment, i.e. immunopurification and filtration steps, are not well defined and must, therefore, be estimated. In addition, such losses can vary for individual peptides. Therefore, we developed a new approach in which isotopically labeled peptide-MHC monomers (hpMHC) are prepared and added directly after cell lysis, i.e. before the usual sample processing. Using this approach, all losses during sample processing can be accounted for and allows accurate determination of specific MHC class I-presented ligands. Our study pinpoints the immunopurification step as the origin of the rather extreme losses during sample pretreatment and offers a solution to account for these losses. Obviously, this has important implications for accurate HLA-ligand quantitation. The strategy presented here can be used to obtain a reliable view of epitope copy number and thus allows improvement of vaccine design and strategies for immunotherapy.


Journal of Immunology | 2013

Discovery of T Cell Epitopes Implementing HLA-Peptidomics into a Reverse Immunology Approach

Pleun Hombrink; Chopie Hassan; Michel G.D. Kester; Arnold H. de Ru; C.A.M. Bergen; Harm Nijveen; Jan-Wouter Drijfhout; J.H.F. Falkenburg; Mirjam H.M. Heemskerk; P.A. van Veelen

T cell recognition of minor histocompatibility Ags (MiHA) plays an important role in the graft-versus-tumor effect of allogeneic stem cell transplantation. Selective infusion of T cells reactive for hematopoiesis-restricted MiHA presented in the context of HLA class I or II molecules may help to separate the graft-versus-tumor effects from graft-versus-host disease effects after allogeneic stem cell transplantation. Over the years, increasing numbers of MiHA have been identified by forward immunology approaches, and the relevance of these MiHA has been illustrated by correlation with clinical outcome. As the tissue distribution of MiHA affects the clinical outcome of T cell responses against these Ags, it would be beneficial to identify additional predefined MiHA that are exclusively expressed on hematopoietic cells. Therefore, several reverse immunology approaches have been explored for the prediction of MiHA. Thus far, these approaches frequently resulted in the identification of T cells directed against epitopes that are not naturally processed and presented. In this study we established a method for the identification of biologically relevant MiHA, implementing mass spectrometry–based HLA-peptidomics into a reverse immunology approach. For this purpose, HLA class I binding peptides were eluted from transformed B cells, analyzed by mass spectrometry, and matched with a database dedicated to identifying polymorphic peptides. This process resulted in a set of 40 MiHA candidates that were evaluated in multiple selection steps. The identification of LB-NISCH-1A demonstrated the technical feasibility of our approach. On the basis of these results, we present an approach that can be of value for the efficient identification of MiHA or other T cell epitopes.


Immunogenetics | 2011

HSPVdb—the Human Short Peptide Variation Database for improved mass spectrometry-based detection of polymorphic HLA-ligands

Harm Nijveen; Michel G.D. Kester; Chopie Hassan; Aurélie Viars; Arnoud H. de Ru; Machiel de Jager; J. H. Fred Falkenburg; Jack A. M. Leunissen; Peter A. van Veelen

T cell epitopes derived from polymorphic proteins or from proteins encoded by alternative reading frames (ARFs) play an important role in (tumor) immunology. Identification of these peptides is successfully performed with mass spectrometry. In a mass spectrometry-based approach, the recorded tandem mass spectra are matched against hypothetical spectra generated from known protein sequence databases. Commonly used protein databases contain a minimal level of redundancy, and thus, are not suitable data sources for searching polymorphic T cell epitopes, either in normal or ARFs. At the same time, however, these databases contain much non-polymorphic sequence information, thereby complicating the matching of recorded and theoretical spectra, and increasing the potential for finding false positives. Therefore, we created a database with peptides from ARFs and peptide variation arising from single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). It is based on the human mRNA sequences from the well-annotated reference sequence (RefSeq) database and associated variation information derived from the Single Nucleotide Polymorphism Database (dbSNP). In this process, we removed all non-polymorphic information. Investigation of the frequency of SNPs in the dbSNP revealed that many SNPs are non-polymorphic “SNPs”. Therefore, we removed those from our dedicated database, and this resulted in a comprehensive high quality database, which we coined the Human Short Peptide Variation Database (HSPVdb). The value of our HSPVdb is shown by identification of the majority of published polymorphic SNP- and/or ARF-derived epitopes from a mass spectrometry-based proteomics workflow, and by a large variety of polymorphic peptides identified as potential T cell epitopes in the HLA-ligandome presented by the Epstein–Barr virus cells.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Dynamics of the mouse brain cortical synaptic proteome during postnatal brain development

Miguel A. Gonzalez-Lozano; Patricia Klemmer; Titia Gebuis; Chopie Hassan; Pim van Nierop; Ronald E. van Kesteren; August B. Smit; Ka Wan Li

Development of the brain involves the formation and maturation of numerous synapses. This process requires prominent changes of the synaptic proteome and potentially involves thousands of different proteins at every synapse. To date the proteome analysis of synapse development has been studied sparsely. Here, we analyzed the cortical synaptic membrane proteome of juvenile postnatal days 9 (P9), P15, P21, P27, adolescent (P35) and different adult ages P70, P140 and P280 of C57Bl6/J mice. Using a quantitative proteomics workflow we quantified 1560 proteins of which 696 showed statistically significant differences over time. Synaptic proteins generally showed increased levels during maturation, whereas proteins involved in protein synthesis generally decreased in abundance. In several cases, proteins from a single functional molecular entity, e.g., subunits of the NMDA receptor, showed differences in their temporal regulation, which may reflect specific synaptic development features of connectivity, strength and plasticity. SNARE proteins, Snap 29/47 and Stx 7/8/12, showed higher expression in immature animals. Finally, we evaluated the function of Cxadr that showed high expression levels at P9 and a fast decline in expression during neuronal development. Knock down of the expression of Cxadr in cultured primary mouse neurons revealed a significant decrease in synapse density.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Proteasomal Degradation of Proinsulin Requires Derlin-2, HRD1 and p97.

Hanneke Hoelen; Arnaud Zaldumbide; Wouter F. van Leeuwen; Ellen C. W. Torfs; Marten A. Engelse; Chopie Hassan; Robert Jan Lebbink; Eelco J.P. de Koning; Maaike E. Resssing; Arnoud H. de Ru; Peter A. van Veelen; Rob C. Hoeben; Bart O. Roep; Emmanuel J. H. J. Wiertz

Patients with type 1 diabetes (T1D) suffer from beta-cell destruction by CD8+ T-cells that have preproinsulin as an important target autoantigen. It is of great importance to understand the molecular mechanism underlying the processing of preproinsulin into these CD8+ T-cell epitopes. We therefore studied a pathway that may contribute to the production of these antigenic peptides: degradation of proinsulin via ER associated protein degradation (ERAD). Analysis of the MHC class I peptide ligandome confirmed the presentation of the most relevant MHC class I-restricted diabetogenic epitopes in our cells: the signal peptide-derived sequence A15-A25 and the insulin B-chain epitopes H29-A38 and H34-V42. We demonstrate that specific silencing of Derlin-2, p97 and HRD1 by shRNAs increases steady state levels of proinsulin. This indicates that these ERAD constituents are critically involved in proinsulin degradation and may therefore also play a role in subsequent antigen generation. These ERAD proteins therefore represent interesting targets for novel therapies aiming at the reduction and possibly also prevention of beta-cell directed auto-immune reactions in T1D.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2015

Identification of Biological Relevant Minor Histocompatibility Antigens within the B-lymphocyte–Derived HLA-Ligandome Using a Reverse Immunology Approach

Pleun Hombrink; Chopie Hassan; Michel G.D. Kester; Lorenz Jahn; Margot J. Pont; Arnoud H. de Ru; Cornelis A.M. van Bergen; Marieke Griffioen; J.H. Frederik Falkenburg; Peter A. van Veelen; Mirjam H.M. Heemskerk

Purpose: T-cell recognition of minor histocompatibility antigens (MiHA) not only plays an important role in the beneficial graft-versus-leukemia (GVL) effect of allogeneic stem cell transplantation (allo-SCT) but also mediates serious GVH complications associated with allo-SCT. Using a reverse immunology approach, we aim to develop a method enabling the identification of T-cell responses directed against predefined antigens, with the goal to select those MiHAs that can be used clinically in combination with allo-SCT. Experimental Design: In this study, we used a recently developed MiHA selection algorithm to select candidate MiHAs within the HLA-presented ligandome of transformed B cells. From the HLA-presented ligandome that predominantly consisted of monomorphic peptides, 25 polymorphic peptides with a clinically relevant allele frequency were selected. By high-throughput screening, the availability of high-avidity T cells specific for these MiHA candidates in different healthy donors was analyzed. Results: With the use of MHC multimer enrichment, analyses of expanded T cells by combinatorial coding MHC multimer flow cytometry, and subsequent single-cell cloning, positive T-cell clones directed to two new MiHA: LB-CLYBL-1Y and LB-TEP1-1S could be demonstrated, indicating the immunogenicity of these two MiHAs. Conclusions: The biologic relevance of MiHA LB-CLYBL-1Y was demonstrated by the detection of LB-CLYBL-1Y–specific T cells in a patient suffering from acute myeloid leukemia (AML) that experienced an anti-leukemic response after treatment with allo-SCT. Clin Cancer Res; 21(9); 2177–86. ©2015 AACR.


Blood | 2015

Therapeutic targeting of the BCR-associated protein CD79b in a TCR-based approach is hampered by aberrant expression of CD79b

Lorenz Jahn; Pleun Hombrink; Chopie Hassan; Kester Mg; van der Steen Dm; Renate S. Hagedoorn; J.H.F. Falkenburg; van Veelen Pa; Mirjam H.M. Heemskerk

Immunotherapy of B-cell malignancies using CD19-targeted chimeric antigen receptor-transduced T cells or CD20-targeted therapeutic monoclonal antibodies has shown clinical efficacy. However, refractory disease and the emergence of antigen-loss tumor escape variants after treatment demonstrate the need to target additional antigens. Here we aimed to target the B-cell receptor-associated protein CD79b by a T-cell receptor (TCR)-based approach. Because thymic selection depletes high-avidity T cells recognizing CD79b-derived peptides presented in self-HLA molecules, we aimed to isolate T cells recognizing these peptides presented in allogeneic HLA. Peptide-HLA tetramers composed of CD79b peptides bound to either HLA-A2 or HLA-B7 were used to isolate T-cell clones from HLA-A*0201 and B*0702-negative individuals. For 3 distinct T-cell clones, CD79b specificity was confirmed through CD79b gene transduction and CD79b-specific shRNA knockdown. The CD79b-specific T-cell clones were highly reactive against CD79b-expressing primary B-cell malignancies, whereas no recognition of nonhematopoietic cells was observed. Although lacking CD79b-cell surface expression, intermediate reactivity toward monocytes, hematopoietic progenitor cells, and T-cells was observed. Quantitative reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction revealed low CD79b gene expression in these cell types. Therefore, aberrant gene expression must be taken into consideration when selecting common, apparently lineage-specific self-antigens as targets for TCR-based immunotherapies.

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Peter A. van Veelen

Leiden University Medical Center

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Michel G.D. Kester

Leiden University Medical Center

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Mirjam H.M. Heemskerk

Leiden University Medical Center

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Arnoud H. de Ru

Leiden University Medical Center

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Pleun Hombrink

Leiden University Medical Center

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J.H. Frederik Falkenburg

Leiden University Medical Center

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Lorenz Jahn

Leiden University Medical Center

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Jan W. Drijfhout

Leiden University Medical Center

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Harm Nijveen

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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J.H.F. Falkenburg

Leiden University Medical Center

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