Department of Immunology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, TN 38105.
Department of Immunology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, TN 38105
J Immunol. 2018 Jan 15;200(2):392-399. doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.1701413.
The successes of antitumor immuno-based therapies and the application of next-generation sequencing to mutation profiling have produced insights into the specific targets of antitumor T cells. Mutated proteins have tremendous potential as targets for interventions using autologous T cells or engineered cell therapies and may serve as important correlates of efficacy for immunoregulatory interventions including immune checkpoint blockade. As mutated self, tumors present an exceptional case for host immunity, which has primarily evolved in response to foreign pathogens. Tumor Ags' resemblance to self may limit immune recognition, but key features appear to be the same between antipathogen and antitumor responses. Determining which targets will make efficacious Ags and which responses might be elicited therapeutically are key questions for the field. Here we discuss current knowledge on antitumor specificity, the mutations that provide immunogenic targets, and how cross-reactivity and immunodominance may contribute to variation in immune responses among tumor types.
抗肿瘤免疫疗法的成功以及下一代测序在突变分析中的应用,使人们深入了解抗肿瘤 T 细胞的特定靶点。突变蛋白作为使用自体 T 细胞或工程细胞疗法进行干预的靶点具有巨大的潜力,并且可能作为免疫调节干预(包括免疫检查点阻断)疗效的重要相关因素。作为自身突变,肿瘤为宿主免疫提供了一个特殊的案例,宿主免疫主要是针对外来病原体而进化的。肿瘤抗原与自身的相似性可能限制了免疫识别,但抗病原体和抗肿瘤反应之间似乎存在相同的关键特征。确定哪些靶标将成为有效的抗原,以及哪些反应可能在治疗上被引发,是该领域的关键问题。在这里,我们讨论了抗肿瘤特异性的现有知识、提供免疫原性靶标的突变,以及交叉反应和免疫优势如何导致不同肿瘤类型之间免疫反应的变化。