A phenotypic signature that identifies neoantigen-reactive T cells in fresh human lung cancers.

Journal: Cancer Cell
Published:
Abstract

A common theme across multiple successful immunotherapies for cancer is the recognition of tumor-specific mutations (neoantigens) by T cells. The rapid discovery of such antigen responses could lead to improved therapies through the adoptive transfer of T cells engineered to express neoantigen-reactive T cell receptors (TCRs). Here, through CITE-seq (cellular indexing of transcriptomes and epitopes by sequencing) and TCR-seq of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs), we develop a neoantigen-reactive T cell signature based on clonotype frequency and CD39 protein and CXCL13 mRNA expression. Screening of TCRs selected by the signature allows us to identify neoantigen-reactive TCRs with a success rate of 45% for CD8+ and 66% for CD4+ T cells. Because of the small number of samples analyzed (4 patients), generalizability remains to be tested. However, this approach can enable the quick identification of neoantigen-reactive TCRs and expedite the engineering of personalized neoantigen-reactive T cells for therapy.

Authors
Ken-ichi Hanada, Chihao Zhao, Raul Gil Hoyos, Jared Gartner, Christopher Chow Parmer, Frank Lowery, Sri Krishna, Todd Prickett, Scott Kivitz, Maria Parkhurst, Nathan Wong, Zachary Rae, Michael Kelly, Stephanie Goff, Paul Robbins, Steven Rosenberg, James Yang