| Literature DB >> 31703593 |
Jonathan A Trujillo1, Jason J Luke1, Yuanyuan Zha1, Jeremy P Segal2, Lauren L Ritterhouse2, Stefani Spranger2,3, Karen Matijevich1, Thomas F Gajewski4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While cancer immunotherapies including checkpoint blockade antibodies, adoptive T cell therapy, and even some vaccines have given rise to major clinical responses with durability in many cases, a subset of patients who initially respond subsequently develop secondary resistance to therapy. Tumor-intrinsic mechanisms of acquired immunotherapy resistance are incompletely understood.Entities:
Keywords: Immune checkpoint blockade; Immune exclusion; Next-generation sequencing; PTEN-loss; Peptide vaccine; Secondary resistance; β-Catenin activation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31703593 PMCID: PMC6839232 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-019-0780-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Fig. 1Tumor gene expression profiling, CD8+ T cell infiltration, and β-catenin status at baseline and at recurrence. a Immunohistochemistry staining for CD8 (red staining) and β-catenin (red staining), in baseline (pre-treatment, right lower paratracheal lymph node metastasis) and recurrent (treatment-resistant, left inguinal lymph node metastasis) melanoma tumor biopsies. b Expression level of immune-related genes in baseline and recurrent tumor samples measured by genome expression microarray. Depicted are the genes GZMK, CD8A, CCL4, CXCL9, CCL3, CCL5, HLADMA, CXCL10, TRGC2, TRAA, NKG7, CD2, TRGV9, TRGC2, PRF1, CD8B, TRBC1, CD38, IL1R2, IL23A, TRBC1, IL2RG, CCL18, CD27, IFNG, RAC2, TNFSF10, CD3E, TAP1, TNFRSF9, HLADPA1, TAP2, NLRP1, STAT1, CXCL13. Genes in bold font are being shown in red and were previously part of our core signature associated with CD8+ T cells [21]. c Gene expression levels of six β-catenin target genes (VEGFA, TCF12, MYC, TCF1, EFNB3, APC2) as well as β-catenin (CTNNB1, red) itself. Genome microarray data (b and c): expression levels for each gene transcript are normalized to median signal intensity of all genes on the microarray, and represented as normalized hybridization intensity data and expressed as expression units
Fig. 2Peripheral tumor-reactive T cells persist at the time of progression. a Expression-level of targeted tumor antigens in pre-treatment (unfilled bars) and resistant (filled bars) tumor samples determined by genome expression microarray (NA-17 not represented on the gene array). Gene expression of targeted antigen transcripts are normalized to median signal intensity of all genes on the array and expressed as expression units. b IFN-γ ELISpot assessing the T cell reactivity against the four peptides used in the vaccine, gp100, Melan-A, MAGE-3, NA-17, over time during initial treatment. PBMCs isolated at each time point and stimulated with the indicated melanoma peptides or media control. Samples analyzed in triplicate and presented as the mean number of spots per number of PBMCs with standard deviation. Mean number of spots for each peptide compared to media control. P-values for gp100, Melan-A, MAGE-3, and NA17 peptide versus media control listed from top to bottom, respectively, at each time point, *p < 0.05, **p < 0.001, ***p < 000.1 (c) IFN-γ ELISpot showing persistent T cell reactivity against three melanoma peptides (gp100, Melan-A and MAGE-3) at the time of progression. PBMCs stimulated with media control, EBV antigen (control peptide), gp100, Melan-A, MAGE-3, and NA17 peptide. Samples analyzed in triplicate and presented as the mean number of spots per number of PBMCs with standard deviation. Mean number of spots compared to media control. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.001, ***p < 000.1
Fig. 3Acquired genetic loss of PTEN in a therapy-resistant melanoma tumor in a patient previously responding to ant-CTLA-4 and anti-PD-1 therapy. a and b Copy number alterations. Next generation sequencing of pre-treatment and therapeutic-resistant melanoma lesions shows acquired loss of PTEN in the treatment resistant tumor specimen but not the pre-treatment lesion. Log2 of fold- changes in the (a) pre-treatment tumor sample (upper panel) and (b) treatment-resistant metastasis (lower panel). The analysis shows copy number changes in BRAF, PTEN, CDKN2A, FANCA, H3F3A, NOTCH1, PALB2, RAD51, RET, TSC1, TSC2. Copy number alterations are indicated in red. Genomic regions across the chromosomes that have no detectable alterations are indicated in blue or gray. Dotted lines indicate the Log2 fold-change cutoffs
Genetic variants detected via next-generation sequencing of pre-treatment and treatment-resistant tumor specimens
| Baseline (pre-treatment) biopsy | Treatment-resistant biopsy |
|---|---|
| Variants detected (NGS platform: OncoScreen ST2.0) | Variants detected (NGS platform: OncoPlus) |
| BRAF c.1799 T > A, p.V600E | BRAF c.1799 T > A, p.V600E |
| CDKN2A loss | CDKN2A loss |
| BRAF amplification | BRAF amplification |
| PTEN loss | |
| APC c.385G > C, p.E129Q | |
| APC c.6211A > G, p.I2071V | |
| PTCH1 c.3641C > T, p.T1214 M | |
| RET c.2939 + 6C > T | |
| FANCA Loss | |
| H3F3A Loss | |
| NOTCH1 Loss | |
| PALB2 Loss Equivocal | |
| RAD51 Loss Equivocal | |
| RET Loss | |
| TSC1 Loss Equivocal | |
| TSC2 Loss Equivocal |
Abbreviations: NGS next-generation genomic sequencing, c. cDNA alteration, p., protein alteration
Fig. 4Loss of PTEN protein expression by melanoma cells associated with a lack of CD8+ T cell infiltration. a Immunofluorescence demonstrates that the on-treatment specimen shows PTEN protein expression by SOX10-positive melanoma cells and CD8+ T cell infiltration (left panels); (b) the therapeutic-resistant post-treatment specimen (right panels) from the same patient shows minimal PTEN protein expression by SOX10-positive melanoma cells and no CD8+ T cell infiltration. Multiplex immunofluorescence staining was performed for DAPI, Sox10, CD8, and PTEN; each stain shown separately and merged