| Literature DB >> 31344031 |
Fan Yang1,2,3, Dae-Kyum Kim1,2,3, Hidewaki Nakagawa4, Shuto Hayashi5, Seiya Imoto5, Lincoln Stein1,6, Frederick P Roth1,2,3,7,8.
Abstract
Somatic mutations in protein-coding regions can generate 'neoantigens' causing developing cancers to be eliminated by the immune system. Quantitative estimates of the strength of this counterselection phenomenon have been lacking. We quantified the extent to which somatic mutations are depleted in peptides that are predicted to be displayed by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I proteins. The extent of this depletion depended on expression level of the neoantigenic gene, and on whether the patient had one or two MHC-encoding alleles that can display the peptide, suggesting MHC-encoding alleles are incompletely dominant. This study provides an initial quantitative understanding of counter-selection of identifiable subclasses of neoantigenic somatic variation.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31344031 PMCID: PMC6657826 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1008227
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Fig 1MHC-display-dependent mutation densities for genes with different expression levels.
Blue bars are the mutation density within the predicted MHC binding peptides. Red bars are the mutation density out of the predicted MHC binding peptides. Mutations were separated into five categories based on the expression levels of their genes.
Fig 2MHC-display-dependent mutation densities for genes with different expression levels, considering each patient’s HLA type.
Blue bars are the mutation density within the predicted patient-displayed MHC binding peptides. Red bars are the mutation density out of the patient-displayed predicted MHC binding peptides. Mutations were separated into five categories based on the expression levels of their genes.
Fig 3Three types of MHC binding peptides based on patient HLA allele types.
Fig 4MHC-display-dependent mutation densities for genes with different expression levels, considering the number of displaying HLA alleles.
Average mutation density in peptides predicted to be displayed by one or two of the 12 common HLA-A or HLA-B allele types. A. Mutation density in peptides predicted to be displayed in patients by only one HLA allele. B. Mutation density in peptides predicted to be displayed in patients with two displaying HLA alleles.
Fig 5Predicting MHC-binding peptides and calculating mutation densities.
Mutations within the MHC binding peptides are shown in blue dots, and mutations out of the MHC binding peptides are shown in pink dots. Protein sequence are shown as yellow line.