| Literature DB >> 34504498 |
Sarah A Penny1, Jennifer G Abelin2, Stacy A Malaker2, Paisley T Myers2, Abu Z Saeed1, Lora G Steadman1, Dina L Bai2, Stephen T Ward1,3, Jeffrey Shabanowitz2, Donald F Hunt2,4, Mark Cobbold1,5.
Abstract
There is a pressing need for novel immunotherapeutic targets in colorectal cancer (CRC). Cytotoxic T cell infiltration is well established as a key prognostic indicator in CRC, and it is known that these tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) target and kill tumor cells. However, the specific antigens that drive these CD8+ T cell responses have not been well characterized. Recently, phosphopeptides have emerged as strong candidates for tumor-specific antigens, as dysregulated signaling in cancer leads to increased and aberrant protein phosphorylation. Here, we identify 120 HLA-I phosphopeptides from primary CRC tumors, CRC liver metastases and CRC cell lines using mass spectrometry and assess the tumor-resident immunity against these posttranslationally modified tumor antigens. Several CRC tumor-specific phosphopeptides were presented by multiple patients' tumors in our cohort (21% to 40%), and many have previously been identified on other malignancies (58% of HLA-A*02 CRC phosphopeptides). These shared antigens derived from mitogenic signaling pathways, including p53, Wnt and MAPK, and are therefore markers of malignancy. The identification of public tumor antigens will allow for the development of broadly applicable targeted therapeutics. Through analysis of TIL cytokine responses to these phosphopeptides, we have established that they are already playing a key role in tumor-resident immunity. Multifunctional CD8+ TILs from primary and metastatic tumors recognized the HLA-I phosphopeptides presented by their originating tumor. Furthermore, TILs taken from other CRC patients' tumors targeted two of these phosphopeptides. In another cohort of CRC patients, the same HLA-I phosphopeptides induced higher peripheral T cell responses than they did in healthy donors, suggesting that these immune responses are specifically activated in CRC patients. Collectively, these results establish HLA-I phosphopeptides as targets of the tumor-resident immunity in CRC, and highlight their potential as candidates for future immunotherapeutic strategies.Entities:
Keywords: CRC (colorectal cancer); HLA-I phosphopeptides; Immunopeptidomics; TIL (tumor infiltrating lymphocytes); signaling pathway; tumor antigens
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34504498 PMCID: PMC8421858 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.723566
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1The work-flow used to identify phosphopeptides from CRC tumors and to test TIL responses to the phosphopeptides identified. Tumor and neighboring healthy tissue samples were taken at resection. Some tumor was cultured and the TILs expanded, using high-dose IL-2. The remaining sample was homogenized in sample buffer and HLA-I complexes affinity purified with immobilized W6/32 antibody. The peptides were acid eluted, the phosphopeptides IMAC enriched and then characterized using LC-MS/MS. Synthetic phosphopeptides were used to test TIL responses to the phosphopeptides identified on the tumors using an intracellular cytokine staining assay.
Figure 2Phosphopeptides identified from colorectal cancer samples – putative cancer antigens. (A) Comparison of phosphopeptides identified on tumors and healthy tissue from CRC patients with primary (n=3) and secondary (n=2) tumors and CRC cell lines (n=3). (B) Proportion of the phosphopeptides identified on primary and secondary tumors that were healthy specific (not detected on tumor) (blue), healthy associated (more detected on healthy than tumor tissue) (purple), equal (where equal was within one order of magnitude) (green), tumor associated (more detected on tumor than healthy tissue) (orange) and tumor specific (not detected on healthy tissue) (red). (C) The number of phosphopeptides identified predicted to bind to different HLA-I. Pie charts show the proportion of phosphopeptides shared (red) across multiple patients’ samples for the most common HLA-alleles. (D) Overlap of HLA-A*02 and HLA-B*07 phosphopeptides identified on CRC (pink) with those found on other types of malignancy; melanoma (blue) and leukemia (yellow).
Figure 3TILs target phosphopeptides found on CRC tumors. (A) Immunohistochemistry (IHC) of the tumors that TILs were taken from, stained for CD3, CD8, CD45RO and Granzyme B (DAB staining in brown). Some slide images unavailable due to loss of section. (B) ICS gating strategy utilized in assessment of TIL phosphopeptide responses. (C) CRCLM1 TIL cytokine responses to phosphopeptides identified on CRCLM1 (results represent the assay repeated on 2 separate occasions, with differentially expanded TILs), pie charts show the proportion of T cells producing 1 (blue), 2 (pink) and 3 (purple) cytokines. Consistently strong responses are highlighted in purple. (D) CRCLM2 TIL cytokine responses to phosphopeptides identified on CRCLM2. (E) CRC3 TIL cytokine responses to phosphopeptides identified on CRC3, pie chart shows the proportion of T cells producing 1 (blue), 2 (pink) and 3 (purple) cytokines.
Figure 4T cells targeting CRC phosphopeptides are found in a number of patients. (A) Summary of CRC TIL cytokine responses to common phosphopeptides (n=3). Box and whisker plots comparing HD and CRC patient PBMC IFNg production targeting (B) HLA-A*02-associated phosphopeptides and (C) HLA-C*07-associated phosphopeptides; median, interquartile range (box) and minima to maxima (whiskers) are shown. Responses that were absent (red circles) in CRC patients are highlighted. Green circles highlight the responses that were significantly higher in CRC patients than HD (Mann-Whitney U, * denotes p<0.05). Green stars highlight the phosphopeptides to which at least one patient had a high PBMC response.
Summary of responses to key CRC HLA-I phosphopeptides.
| Phosphopeptide | RVAsPTSGV | VMIGsPKKV | RRGsFEVTL |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protein of Origin | IRS2 | TNS3 | SELH |
| HLA-binding | A*02 | A*02 | C*07 |
| Samples | colo205 & hct116 | sw620 | CRC1, CRCLM1, CRCLM2 |
| Other malignancies | Melanoma & Leukemia | Melanoma & Leukemia | |
| TIL responses | – | +++ | ++ |
| HD PBMC responses | ++ | +++ | + |
| CRC patient PBMC | +++ | +++ | +++ |
+ low, ++ moderate, +++ strong responses, - not detected.
Figure 5Phosphopeptide-specific T cells can kill, but expanded TILs do not. (A) A europium release assay, using a VMI-specific T cell line grown from patient (CRC5) TILs to target T2 cells pulsed with phosphopeptide VMIGsPKKV, or unphosphorylated VMIGSPKKV. (B) Flow cytometry to show the activation and degranulation of VMI-specific CRC5 TILs when stimulated with unphosphorylated VMIGSPKKV (top) and phosphorylated VMIGsPKKV (bottom). Healthy donor T cell lines targeting (C) VMIGsPKKV and (D) RVAsPTSGV were used in a europium-release killing assay with a CRC cell line natively expressing the phosphopeptides (SW620).