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[Preprint]. 2023 Oct 20:2023.10.19.563178. [Version 1] doi: 10.1101/2023.10.19.563178

Tumor-wide RNA splicing aberrations generate immunogenic public neoantigens

Darwin W Kwok, Nicholas O Stevers, Takahide Nejo, Lee H Chen, Inaki Etxeberria, Jangham Jung, Kaori Okada, Maggie Colton Cove, Senthilnath Lakshmanachetty, Marco Gallus, Abhilash Barpanda, Chibo Hong, Gary KL Chan, Samuel H Wu, Emilio Ramos, Akane Yamamichi, Jerry Liu, Payal Watchmaker, Hirokazu Ogino, Atsuro Saijo, Aidan Du, Nadia Grishanina, James Woo, Aaron Diaz, Susan M Chang, Joanna J Phillips, Arun P Wiita, Christopher A Klebanoff, Joseph F Costello, Hideho Okada
PMCID: PMC10614978  PMID: 37904942

Summary

T-cell-mediated immunotherapies are limited by the extent to which cancer-specific antigens are homogenously expressed throughout a tumor. We reasoned that recurrent splicing aberrations in cancer represent a potential source of tumor-wide and public neoantigens, and to test this possibility, we developed a novel pipeline for identifying neojunctions expressed uniformly within a tumor across diverse cancer types. Our analyses revealed multiple neojunctions that recur across patients and either exhibited intratumor heterogeneity or, in some cases, were tumor-wide. We identified CD8+ T-cell clones specific for neoantigens derived from tumor-wide and conserved neojunctions in GNAS and RPL22 , respectively. TCR-engineered CD8 + T-cells targeting these mutations conferred neoantigen-specific tumor cell eradication. Furthermore, we revealed that cancer-specific dysregulation in splicing factor expression leads to recurrent neojunction expression. Together, these data reveal that a subset of neojunctions are both intratumorally conserved and public, providing the molecular basis for novel T-cell-based immunotherapies that address intratumoral heterogeneity.

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