Martin Spencer D, Wick Darin A, Nielsen Julie S, Little Nicole, Holt Robert A, Nelson Brad H
Department of Medical Genetics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Trev and Joyce Deeley Research Centre, British Columbia Cancer Agency, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.
Oncoimmunology. 2017 Sep 21;7(1):e1371895. doi: 10.1080/2162402X.2017.1371895. eCollection 2017.
Mutated cancer antigens, or neoantigens, represent compelling immunological targets and appear to underlie the success of several forms of immunotherapy. While there are anecdotal reports of neoantigen-specific T cells being present in the peripheral blood and/or tumors of cancer patients, effective adoptive cell therapy (ACT) against neoantigens will require reliable methods to isolate and expand rare, neoantigen-specific T cells from clinically available biospecimens, ideally prior to clinical relapse. Here, we addressed this need using "mini-lines", large libraries of parallel T cell cultures, each originating from only 2,000 T cells. Using small quantities of peripheral blood from multiple time points in an ovarian cancer patient, we screened over 3.3 × 10 CD8 T cells by ELISPOT for recognition of peptides corresponding to the full complement of somatic mutations (n = 37) from the patient's tumor. We identified ten T cell lines which collectively recognized peptides encoding five distinct mutations. Six of the ten T cell lines recognized a previously described neoantigen from this patient (HSDL1), whereas the remaining four lines recognized peptides corresponding to four other mutations. Only the HSDL1-specific T cell lines recognized autologous tumor. HSDL1-specific T cells comprised at least three distinct clonotypes and could be identified and expanded from peripheral blood 3-9 months prior to the first tumor recurrence. These T cells became undetectable at later time points, underscoring the dynamic nature of the response. Thus, neoantigen-specific T cells can be expanded from small volumes of blood during tumor remission, making pre-emptive ACT a plausible clinical strategy.
突变的癌症抗原,即新抗原,是极具吸引力的免疫靶点,似乎也是多种免疫疗法取得成功的基础。虽然有一些轶事报道称癌症患者的外周血和/或肿瘤中存在新抗原特异性T细胞,但针对新抗原的有效过继性细胞疗法(ACT)需要可靠的方法,从临床可用的生物样本中分离和扩增罕见的、新抗原特异性T细胞,最好是在临床复发之前。在这里,我们使用“微型细胞系”(即大量平行T细胞培养文库,每个文库仅来源于2000个T细胞)满足了这一需求。我们利用一名卵巢癌患者多个时间点的少量外周血,通过ELISPOT筛选了超过3.3×10个CD8 T细胞,以识别与该患者肿瘤体细胞突变全套(n = 37)相对应的肽段。我们鉴定出了10个T细胞系,它们共同识别编码5种不同突变的肽段。这10个T细胞系中的6个识别此前描述过的该患者的一种新抗原(HSDL1),而其余4个细胞系识别与其他4种突变相对应的肽段。只有HSDL1特异性T细胞系识别自体肿瘤。HSDL1特异性T细胞至少包含三种不同的克隆型,并且可以在首次肿瘤复发前3 - 9个月从外周血中识别并扩增出来。这些T细胞在随后的时间点变得无法检测到,这突出了反应的动态性质。因此,新抗原特异性T细胞可以在肿瘤缓解期从小量血液中扩增出来,使得抢先性ACT成为一种可行的临床策略。