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Deep learning boosts sensitivity of mass spectrometry-based immunopeptidomics.

Mathias WilhelmDaniel P ZolgMichael GraberSiegfried GessulatTobias K SchmidtKarsten SchnatbaumCelina TretterPhilipp SeifertNiklas de Andrade KrätzigJohannes ZerweckTobias KnauteEva BräunleinPatroklos SamarasLudwig LautenbacherSusan KlaegerHolger WenschuhRoland RadBernard DelangheAndreas HuhmerSteven A CarrKarl R ClauserAngela M KrackhardtUlf ReimerBernhard Kuster
Published in: Nature communications (2021)
Characterizing the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) bound ligandome by mass spectrometry (MS) holds great promise for developing vaccines and drugs for immune-oncology. Still, the identification of non-tryptic peptides presents substantial computational challenges. To address these, we synthesized and analyzed >300,000 peptides by multi-modal LC-MS/MS within the ProteomeTools project representing HLA class I & II ligands and products of the proteases AspN and LysN. The resulting data enabled training of a single model using the deep learning framework Prosit, allowing the accurate prediction of fragment ion spectra for tryptic and non-tryptic peptides. Applying Prosit demonstrates that the identification of HLA peptides can be improved up to 7-fold, that 87% of the proposed proteasomally spliced HLA peptides may be incorrect and that dozens of additional immunogenic neo-epitopes can be identified from patient tumors in published data. Together, the provided peptides, spectra and computational tools substantially expand the analytical depth of immunopeptidomics workflows.
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