Characterization of CD8+ T-cell responses to non-anchor-type HLA class I neoantigens with single amino-acid substitutions

CD8 + T cells are capable of recognizing mutation-derived neoantigens displayed by HLA class I molecules, thereby exhibiting the ability to distinguish between cancer and normal cells. However, accumulating evidence has shown that only a small fraction of nonsynonymous somatic mutations give rise to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Oncoimmunology 2021-01, Vol.10 (1), p.1870062-1870062
Hauptverfasser: Shinkawa, Tomoyo, Tokita, Serina, Nakatsugawa, Munehide, Kikuchi, Yasuhiro, Kanaseki, Takayuki, Torigoe, Toshihiko
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:CD8 + T cells are capable of recognizing mutation-derived neoantigens displayed by HLA class I molecules, thereby exhibiting the ability to distinguish between cancer and normal cells. However, accumulating evidence has shown that only a small fraction of nonsynonymous somatic mutations give rise to clinically relevant neoantigens. The properties of such neoantigens, which must be presented by HLA and immunogenic to induce a T-cell response, remain elusive. In this study, we explored the HLA class I ligandome of a human cancer cell line with microsatellite instability using a proteogenomic approach. The results demonstrated that neoantigens accounted for only 0.34% of the HLA class I ligandome, and most neoantigens were encoded by genes with abundant expression. Thereafter, T-cell responses were prioritized, and immunodominant neoantigens were defined using naive CD8 + T cells derived from healthy donors. AKF9, an immunogenic neoantigen with a mutation at a non-anchor position, formed a stable peptide-HLA complex. T-cell responses were analyzed against a panel of AKF9 variants with single amino-acid substitutions, in which mutations did not alter the high HLA-binding affinity and stability. The responses varied across individuals, demonstrating the impact of heterogeneous T-cell repertoires in this human cancer model. Moreover, responses were biased toward a variant group with large structural changes compared to the wild-type peptide. Thus, naive T-cell induction can be attributed to multiple determinants. Combining structural dissimilarity with gene-expression levels, HLA-binding affinity, and stability may further help prioritize the immunogenicity of non-anchor-type neoantigens.
ISSN:2162-402X
2162-4011
2162-402X
DOI:10.1080/2162402X.2020.1870062