| Literature DB >> 28533942 |
Vitaly Kochin1,2, Takayuki Kanaseki1, Serina Tokita1, Sho Miyamoto1, Yosuke Shionoya1, Yasuhiro Kikuchi1, Daichi Morooka1, Yoshihiko Hirohashi1, Tomohide Tsukahara1, Kazue Watanabe1,3, Shingo Toji3, Yasuo Kokai4, Noriyuki Sato1, Toshihiko Torigoe1.
Abstract
This study focused on HLA-A24 and comprehensively analyzed the ligandome of colon and lung cancer cells without the use of MHC-binding in silico prediction algorithms. Affinity purification using the antibody specific to HLA-A24 followed by LC-MS/MS sequencing was used to detect peptides, which harbored the known characteristics of HLA-A24 peptides in terms of length and anchor motifs. Ligandome analysis demonstrated the natural presentation of two different types of novel tumor-associated antigens. The ligandome contained a peptide derived from SUV39H2, a gene found to be expressed in a variety of cancers but not in normal tissues (except for the testis). The SUV39H2 peptide is immunogenic and elicits cytotoxic CD8+ T-cell (CTL) responses against cancer cells and is thus a novel cancer-testis antigen. Moreover, we found that microsatellite instability (MSI)-colon cancer cells displayed a neoepitope with an amino-acid substitution, while microsatellite stable (MSS)-colon and lung cancer cells displayed its counterpart peptide without the substitution. Structure modeling of peptide-HLA-A24 complexes predicted that the mutated residue at P8 was accessible to T-cell receptors. The neoepitope readily elicited CTL responses, which discriminated it from its wild-type counterpart, and the CTLs exhibited considerably high cytotoxicity against MSS-colon cancer cells carrying the responsible gene mutation. The specific and strong CTL lysis observed in this study fosters our understanding of immune surveillance against neoantigens.Entities:
Keywords: CTL; Cancer immunotherapy; HLA ligandome; neoantigen; tumor-associated antigen
Year: 2017 PMID: 28533942 PMCID: PMC5433517 DOI: 10.1080/2162402X.2017.1293214
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncoimmunology ISSN: 2162-4011 Impact factor: 8.110