Calreticulin mutant myeloproliferative neoplasms induce MHC-I skewing, which can be overcome by an optimized peptide cancer vaccine

  • Mathieu Gigoux*
  • , Morten O Holmström
  • , Roberta Zappasodi
  • , Joseph J Park
  • , Stephane Pourpe
  • , Cansu Cimen Bozkus
  • , Levi M B Mangarin
  • , David Redmond
  • , Svena Verma
  • , Sara Schad
  • , Mariam M George
  • , Divya Venkatesh
  • , Arnab Ghosh
  • , David Hoyos
  • , Zaki Molvi
  • , Baransel Kamaz
  • , Anna E Marneth
  • , William Duke
  • , Matthew J Leventhal
  • , Max Jan
  • Vincent T Ho, Gabriela S Hobbs, Trine Alma Knudsen, Vibe Skov, Lasse Kjær, Thomas Stauffer Larsen, Dennis Lund Hansen, R Coleman Lindsley, Hans Hasselbalch, Jacob H Grauslund, Thomas L Lisle, Özcan Met, Patrick Wilkinson, Benjamin Greenbaum, Manuel A Sepulveda, Timothy Chan, Raajit Rampal, Mads H Andersen, Omar Abdel-Wahab, Nina Bhardwaj, Jedd D Wolchok, Ann Mullally, Taha Merghoub
*Corresponding author af dette arbejde

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftArtikelForskningpeer review

Abstract

The majority of JAK2V617F-negative myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs) have disease-initiating frameshift mutations in calreticulin (CALR), resulting in a common carboxyl-terminal mutant fragment (CALRMUT), representing an attractive source of neoantigens for cancer vaccines. However, studies have shown that CALRMUT-specific T cells are rare in patients with CALRMUT MPN for unknown reasons. We examined class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC-I) allele frequencies in patients with CALRMUT MPN from two independent cohorts. We observed that MHC-I alleles that present CALRMUT neoepitopes with high affinity are underrepresented in patients with CALRMUT MPN. We speculated that this was due to an increased chance of immune-mediated tumor rejection by individuals expressing one of these MHC-I alleles such that the disease never clinically manifested. As a consequence of this MHC-I allele restriction, we reasoned that patients with CALRMUT MPN would not efficiently respond to a CALRMUT fragment cancer vaccine but would when immunized with a modified CALRMUT heteroclitic peptide vaccine approach. We found that heteroclitic CALRMUT peptides specifically designed for the MHC-I alleles of patients with CALRMUT MPN efficiently elicited a CALRMUT cross-reactive CD8+ T cell response in human peripheral blood samples but not to the matched weakly immunogenic CALRMUT native peptides. We corroborated this effect in vivo in mice and observed that C57BL/6J mice can mount a CD8+ T cell response to the CALRMUT fragment upon immunization with a CALRMUT heteroclitic, but not native, peptide. Together, our data emphasize the therapeutic potential of heteroclitic peptide-based cancer vaccines in patients with CALRMUT MPN.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummereaba4380
TidsskriftScience Translational Medicine
Vol/bind14
Udgave nummer649
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 15 jun. 2022

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