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Tumor neoantigen heterogeneity impacts bystander immune inhibition of pancreatic cancer growth

The immunogenic clonal-fraction threshold in heterogeneous solid-tumor required to induce effective bystander-killing of non-immunogenic subclones is unknown. Pancreatic cancer poses crucial challenges for immune therapeutic interventions due to low mutational-burden and consequent lack of neoantige...

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Autores principales: Das, Manisit, Zhou, Xuefei, Liu, Yun, Das, Anirban, Vincent, Benjamin G., Li, Jingjing, Liu, Rihe, Huang, Leaf
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Neoplasia Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7475277/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32862105
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tranon.2020.100856
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author Das, Manisit
Zhou, Xuefei
Liu, Yun
Das, Anirban
Vincent, Benjamin G.
Li, Jingjing
Liu, Rihe
Huang, Leaf
author_facet Das, Manisit
Zhou, Xuefei
Liu, Yun
Das, Anirban
Vincent, Benjamin G.
Li, Jingjing
Liu, Rihe
Huang, Leaf
author_sort Das, Manisit
collection PubMed
description The immunogenic clonal-fraction threshold in heterogeneous solid-tumor required to induce effective bystander-killing of non-immunogenic subclones is unknown. Pancreatic cancer poses crucial challenges for immune therapeutic interventions due to low mutational-burden and consequent lack of neoantigens. Here, we designed a model to incorporate artificial-neoantigens into genes-of -interest in cancer-cells and to test their potential to actuate bystander-killing. By precisely controlling a neoantigen's abundance in the tumor, we studied the impact of neoantigen frequency on immune-response and immune-escape. Our results showed single, strong, widely-expressed neoantigen could lead to robust antitumor response when over 80% of cancer cells express the neoantigen. Further, immunological assays demonstrated T-cell responses against non-target self-antigen on KRAS-oncoprotein, when we inoculated animals with a high frequency of tumor-cells expressing test-neoantigen. Using nanoparticle-based gene-therapy, we successfully altered tumor-microenvironment by perturbing interleukin-12 and interleukin-10 gene-expression. The subsequent microenvironment-remodeling reduced the neoantigen frequency threshold at which bioluminescent signal intensity for tumor-burden decreased 1.5-log-fold, marking robust tumor-growth inhibition, from 83% to 29%. Our results thus suggest bystander killing is inefficient in immunologically-cold tumors like pancreatic-cancer and requires high neoantigen abundance. However, bystander killing mediated antitumor response can be rescued by adjuvant-immune therapy.
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spelling pubmed-74752772020-09-18 Tumor neoantigen heterogeneity impacts bystander immune inhibition of pancreatic cancer growth Das, Manisit Zhou, Xuefei Liu, Yun Das, Anirban Vincent, Benjamin G. Li, Jingjing Liu, Rihe Huang, Leaf Transl Oncol Original article The immunogenic clonal-fraction threshold in heterogeneous solid-tumor required to induce effective bystander-killing of non-immunogenic subclones is unknown. Pancreatic cancer poses crucial challenges for immune therapeutic interventions due to low mutational-burden and consequent lack of neoantigens. Here, we designed a model to incorporate artificial-neoantigens into genes-of -interest in cancer-cells and to test their potential to actuate bystander-killing. By precisely controlling a neoantigen's abundance in the tumor, we studied the impact of neoantigen frequency on immune-response and immune-escape. Our results showed single, strong, widely-expressed neoantigen could lead to robust antitumor response when over 80% of cancer cells express the neoantigen. Further, immunological assays demonstrated T-cell responses against non-target self-antigen on KRAS-oncoprotein, when we inoculated animals with a high frequency of tumor-cells expressing test-neoantigen. Using nanoparticle-based gene-therapy, we successfully altered tumor-microenvironment by perturbing interleukin-12 and interleukin-10 gene-expression. The subsequent microenvironment-remodeling reduced the neoantigen frequency threshold at which bioluminescent signal intensity for tumor-burden decreased 1.5-log-fold, marking robust tumor-growth inhibition, from 83% to 29%. Our results thus suggest bystander killing is inefficient in immunologically-cold tumors like pancreatic-cancer and requires high neoantigen abundance. However, bystander killing mediated antitumor response can be rescued by adjuvant-immune therapy. Neoplasia Press 2020-08-28 /pmc/articles/PMC7475277/ /pubmed/32862105 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tranon.2020.100856 Text en © 2020 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original article
Das, Manisit
Zhou, Xuefei
Liu, Yun
Das, Anirban
Vincent, Benjamin G.
Li, Jingjing
Liu, Rihe
Huang, Leaf
Tumor neoantigen heterogeneity impacts bystander immune inhibition of pancreatic cancer growth
title Tumor neoantigen heterogeneity impacts bystander immune inhibition of pancreatic cancer growth
title_full Tumor neoantigen heterogeneity impacts bystander immune inhibition of pancreatic cancer growth
title_fullStr Tumor neoantigen heterogeneity impacts bystander immune inhibition of pancreatic cancer growth
title_full_unstemmed Tumor neoantigen heterogeneity impacts bystander immune inhibition of pancreatic cancer growth
title_short Tumor neoantigen heterogeneity impacts bystander immune inhibition of pancreatic cancer growth
title_sort tumor neoantigen heterogeneity impacts bystander immune inhibition of pancreatic cancer growth
topic Original article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7475277/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32862105
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tranon.2020.100856
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