| Literature DB >> 33875134 |
Gerald Willimsky1, Christin Beier2, Lena Immisch1, Georgios Papafotiou1, Vivian Scheuplein-Schlosser3, Andrean Goede4, Hermann-Georg Holzhütter2, Thomas Blankenstein5, Peter M Kloetzel6.
Abstract
Proteasome catalyzed peptide splicing (PCPS) of cancer-driving antigens could generate attractive neoepitopes to be targeted by TCR-based adoptive T cell therapy. Based on a spliced peptide prediction algorithm TCRs were generated against putative KRASG12V and RAC2P29L derived neo-splicetopes with high HLA-A*02:01 binding affinity. TCRs generated in mice with a diverse human TCR repertoire specifically recognized the respective target peptides with high efficacy. However, we failed to detect any neo-splicetope specific T cell response when testing the in vivo neo-splicetope generation and obtained no experimental evidence that the putative KRASG12V- and RAC2P29L-derived neo-splicetopes were naturally processed and presented. Furthermore, only the putative RAC2P29L-derived neo-splicetopes was generated by in vitro PCPS. The experiments pose severe questions on the notion that available algorithms or the in vitro PCPS reaction reliably simulate in vivo splicing and argue against the general applicability of an algorithm-driven 'reverse immunology' pipeline for the identification of cancer-specific neo-splicetopes.Entities:
Keywords: biochemistry; chemical biology; human; immunology; inflammation; mouse
Year: 2021 PMID: 33875134 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.62019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140