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Combination of chemotherapy and PD-1 blockade induces T cell responses to tumor non-mutated neoantigens.

Alessio GrimaldiIlenia CammarataCarmela MartireChiara FocaccettiSilvia PiconeseMarta BuccilliCarmine ManconeFederica BuzzacchinoJulio Rodrigo Giron BerriosNicoletta D'AlessandrisSilverio TomaoFelice GiangasperoMarino ParoliRosalba CaccavaleGian Paolo SpinelliGabriella GirelliGiovanna PeruzziPaola NisticoSheila SpadaMariangela PanettaFabiana Letizia CecerePaolo ViscaFrancesco FaccioloFlavia LongoVincenzo Barnaba
Published in: Communications biology (2020)
Here, we developed an unbiased, functional target-discovery platform to identify immunogenic proteins from primary non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cells that had been induced to apoptosis by cisplatin (CDDP) treatment in vitro, as compared with their live counterparts. Among the multitude of proteins identified, some of them were represented as fragmented proteins in apoptotic tumor cells, and acted as non-mutated neoantigens (NM-neoAgs). Indeed, only the fragmented proteins elicited effective multi-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cell responses, upon a chemotherapy protocol including CDDP. Importantly, these responses further increased upon anti-PD-1 therapy, and correlated with patients' survival and decreased PD-1 expression. Cross-presentation assays showed that NM-neoAgs were unveiled in apoptotic tumor cells as the result of caspase-dependent proteolytic activity of cellular proteins. Our study demonstrates that apoptotic tumor cells generate a repertoire of immunogenic NM-neoAgs that could be potentially used for developing effective T cell-based immunotherapy across multiple cancer patients.
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