RRC ID 68658
Author Ebrahimi-Nik H, Moussa M, Englander RP, Singhaviranon S, Michaux J, Pak H, Miyadera H, Corwin WL, Keller GLJ, Hagymasi AT, Shcheglova TV, Coukos G, Baker BM, Mandoiu II, Bassani-Sternberg M, Srivastava PK.
Title Reversion analysis reveals the in vivo immunogenicity of a poorly MHC I-binding cancer neoepitope.
Journal Nat Commun
Abstract High-affinity MHC I-peptide interactions are considered essential for immunogenicity. However, some neo-epitopes with low affinity for MHC I have been reported to elicit CD8 T cell dependent tumor rejection in immunization-challenge studies. Here we show in a mouse model that a neo-epitope that poorly binds to MHC I is able to enhance the immunogenicity of a tumor in the absence of immunization. Fibrosarcoma cells with a naturally occurring mutation are edited to their wild type counterpart; the mutation is then re-introduced in order to obtain a cell line that is genetically identical to the wild type except for the neo-epitope-encoding mutation. Upon transplantation into syngeneic mice, all three cell lines form tumors that are infiltrated with activated T cells. However, lymphocytes from the two tumors that harbor the mutation show significantly stronger transcriptional signatures of cytotoxicity and TCR engagement, and induce greater breadth of TCR reactivity than those of the wild type tumors. Structural modeling of the neo-epitope peptide/MHC I pairs suggests increased hydrophobicity of the neo-epitope surface, consistent with higher TCR reactivity. These results confirm the in vivo immunogenicity of low affinity or 'non-binding' epitopes that do not follow the canonical concept of MHC I-peptide recognition.
Volume 12(1)
Pages 6423
Published 2021-11-5
DOI 10.1038/s41467-021-26646-5
PII 10.1038/s41467-021-26646-5
PMID 34741035
PMC PMC8571378
MeSH CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes / metabolism CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes / physiology Epitopes, T-Lymphocyte / genetics* Epitopes, T-Lymphocyte / immunology* Mutation / genetics Neoplasms / genetics Neoplasms / immunology* Neoplasms / metabolism
IF 12.121
Resource
Human and Animal Cells NIH3T3-3-4(RCB1862)