T-cell Responses to TP53 “Hotspot” Mutations and Unique Neoantigens Expressed by Human Ovarian Cancers

DC Deniger, A Pasetto, PF Robbins, JJ Gartner… - Clinical Cancer …, 2018 - AACR
DC Deniger, A Pasetto, PF Robbins, JJ Gartner, TD Prickett, BC Paria, P Malekzadeh, L Jia…
Clinical Cancer Research, 2018AACR
Purpose: This was a study prospectively evaluating intratumoral T-cell responses to
autologous somatic mutated neoepitopes expressed by human metastatic ovarian cancers.
Patients and Methods: Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) were expanded from resected
ovarian cancer metastases, which were analyzed by whole-exome and transcriptome
sequencing to identify autologous somatic mutations. All mutated neoepitopes, independent
of prediction algorithms, were expressed in autologous antigen-presenting cells and then …
Abstract
Purpose: This was a study prospectively evaluating intratumoral T-cell responses to autologous somatic mutated neoepitopes expressed by human metastatic ovarian cancers.
Patients and Methods: Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) were expanded from resected ovarian cancer metastases, which were analyzed by whole-exome and transcriptome sequencing to identify autologous somatic mutations. All mutated neoepitopes, independent of prediction algorithms, were expressed in autologous antigen-presenting cells and then cocultured with TIL fragment cultures. Secretion of IFNγ or upregulation of 41BB indicated a T-cell response.
Results: Seven women with metastatic ovarian cancer were evaluated, and 5 patients had clear, dominant T-cell responses to mutated neoantigens, which were corroborated by comparison with the wild-type sequence, identification of the minimal epitope, human leukocyte antigen (HLA) restriction element(s), and neoantigen-specific T-cell receptor(s). Mutated neoantigens were restricted by HLA-B, -C, -DP, -DQ, and/or -DR alleles and appeared to principally arise from random, somatic mutations unique to each patient. We established that TP53 “hotspot” mutations (c.659A>G; p.Y220C and c.733G>A; p.G245S) expressed by two different patients' tumors were both immunogenic in the context of HLA-DRB3*02:02.
Conclusions: Mutation-reactive T cells infiltrated ovarian cancer metastases at sufficient frequencies to warrant their investigation as adoptive cell therapy. In addition, transfer of TP53 “hotspot” mutation-reactive T-cell receptors into peripheral blood T cells could be evaluated as a gene therapy for a diverse range of tumor histologies. Clin Cancer Res; 24(22); 5562–73. ©2018 AACR.
See related commentary by McNeish, p. 5493
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