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Cell surface marker-based capture of neoantigen-reactive CD8+ T-cell receptors from metastatic tumor digests

Authors :
Steven A Rosenberg
Paul Robbins
Biman Paria
Jared J Gartner
Sri Krishna
Satyajit Ray
Rami Yossef
Victoria Hill
Frank J Lowery
Praveen D Chatani
Neilesh B Parikh
Kyle J Hitscherich
Maria Florentin
Alakesh Bera
Maria Parkhust
Source :
Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer, Vol 11, Iss 5 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2023.

Abstract

Background Cellular immunotherapies using autologous tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) can induce durable regression of epithelial cancers in selected patients with treatment-refractory metastatic disease. As the genetic engineering of T cells with tumor-reactive T-cell receptors (TCRs) comes to the forefront of clinical investigation, the rapid, scalable, and cost-effective detection of patient-specific neoantigen-reactive TIL remains a top priority.Methods We analyzed the single-cell transcriptomic states of 31 neoantigen-specific T-cell clonotypes to identify cell surface dysfunction markers that best identified the metastatic transcriptional states enriched with antitumor TIL. We developed an efficient method to capture neoantigen-reactive TCRs directly from resected human tumors based on cell surface co-expression of CD39, programmed cell death protein-1, and TIGIT dysfunction markers (CD8+ TILTP).Results TILTP TCR isolation achieved a high degree of correlation with single-cell transcriptomic signatures that identify neoantigen-reactive TCRs, making it a cost-effective strategy using widely available resources. Reconstruction of additional TILTP TCRs from tumors identified known and novel antitumor TCRs, showing that at least 39.5% of TILTP TCRs are neoantigen-reactive or tumor-reactive. Despite their substantial enrichment for neoantigen-reactive TCR clonotypes, clonal dynamics of 24 unique antitumor TILTP clonotypes from four patients indicated that most in vitro expanded TILTP populations failed to demonstrate neoantigen reactivity, either by loss of neoantigen-reactive clones during TIL expansion, or through functional impairment during cognate neoantigen recognition.Conclusions While direct usage of in vitro-expanded CD8+ TILTP as a source for cellular therapy might be precluded by profound TIL dysfunction, isolating TILTP represents a streamlined effective approach to rapidly identify neoantigen-reactive TCRs to design engineered cellular immunotherapies against cancer.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20511426
Volume :
11
Issue :
5
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.bbdaffbcb90479ea2c903c47528272b
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/jitc-2022-006264