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Neoantigens Derived from Recurrently Mutated Genes as Potential Immunotherapy Targets for Gastric Cancer.

Jie ZhouWenyi ZhaoJingcheng WuJun LuYongfeng DingShanshan WuHaiyong WangDing DingFan MoZhan ZhouLi-Song TengRongchang Chen
Published in: BioMed research international (2019)
Neoantigens are optimal tumor-specific targets for T-cell based immunotherapy, especially for patients with "undruggable" mutated driver genes. T-cell immunotherapy can be a "universal" treatment for HLA genotype patients sharing same oncogenic mutations. To identify potential neoantigens for therapy in gastric cancer, 32 gastric cancer patients were enrolled in our study. Whole exome sequencing data from these patients was processed by TSNAD software to detect cancer somatic mutations and predict neoantigens. The somatic mutations between different patients suggested a high interpatient heterogeneity. C>A and C>T substitutions are common, suggesting an active nucleotide excision repair. The number of predicted neoantigens was significantly higher in patients at stage T1a compared to in patients at T2 or T4b. Six genes (PIK3CA, FAT4, BRCA2, GNAQ, LRP1B, and PREX2) were found as recurrently mutated driver genes in our study. Combining with highly frequent HLA alleles, several neoantigens derived from six recurrently mutated genes were considered as potential targets for further immunotherapy.
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