Journal
Oncoimmunology, 2017
Authors
Martin, Spencer D, Wick, Darin A, Nielsen, Julie S, Little, Nicole, Holt, Robert A, Nelson, Brad H
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{{sup}}6{{/sup}} CD8{{sup}}+{{/sup}} 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{{sup}}L25V{{/sup}}), whereas the remaining four lines recognized peptides corresponding to four other mutations. Only the HSDL1{{sup}}L25V{{/sup}}-specific T cell lines recognized autologous tumor. HSDL1{{sup}}L25V{{/sup}}-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.
Title
A library-based screening method identifies neoantigen-reactive T cells in peripheral blood prior to relapse of ovarian cancer.
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