Abstract

BackgroundOne of today’s greatest hurdles for cancer immunotherapy is the absence of information regarding which tumor antigens are already recognized by patients receiving immunotherapies, and whether those therapies then boost or generate an immune response against tumor proteins. For CD8+ T cells in particular, patient-specific immune recognition and responses at the level of individual tumor antigens are rarely characterized. Because of this, some immunologists have turned to serum antibodies as an alternative measure of antigen-specific anti-tumor immunity. In this work, we sought to simultaneously interrogate serum IgG and CD8+ T cell recognition of individual tumor antigens to determine whether antigen-specific serum IgG antibodies provide a window into the behavior of antigen-specific CD8+ T cell responses. Using antibody-based assays to evaluate immune response repertoires and focus T cell antigen exploration could afford substantial advantages for discovering and monitoring the anti-cancer immune responses of patients enrolled on clinical trials.MethodsWe vaccinated female BALB/c mice with a novel combination of an autophagosome-enriched vaccine derived from 4T1 mammary carcinoma along with poly-I:C adjuvant, then screened serum for IgG binding to arrays of 15mer peptides containing known mutation sites in 4T1. Simultaneously, we primed CD8+ T cell cultures from these same animals with 8-11mer peptides derived from these antigens. These primed T cells were then stimulated to measure recognition of the peptides or live 4T1 cells by IFNγ release.ResultsVaccinated animals demonstrate increases in antigen-specific CD8+ T cell recognition of 4T1 tumor cells and peptides. For proteins confirmed in 4T1 cells and vaccine by mass spectrometry, there is a correlation between this increased CD8+ T cell IFNγ release and serum IgG binding to individual peptide antigens.ConclusionsThese results suggest it is possible to observe some features of a patient’s antigen-specific T cell repertoire via an antibody surrogate, which has implications for tumor antigen discovery and clinical monitoring of antigen-specific anti-tumor immunity.

Highlights

  • One of today’s greatest hurdles for cancer immunotherapy is the absence of information regarding which tumor antigens are already recognized by patients receiving immunotherapies, and whether those therapies boost or generate an immune response against tumor proteins

  • This vaccine platform is currently in clinical trials, and has demonstrated increased therapeutic efficacy when combined with antiOX40 for the treatment of established 4T1 [24], a metastatic mammary carcinoma model with established sequencing and neoantigen immunity data [27, 28, 35]

  • Animals received a 4T1 autophagosomeenriched vaccine + poly-I:C adjuvant injected into the inguinal lymph nodes of naïve female BALB/c mice

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Summary

Introduction

One of today’s greatest hurdles for cancer immunotherapy is the absence of information regarding which tumor antigens are already recognized by patients receiving immunotherapies, and whether those therapies boost or generate an immune response against tumor proteins. Others have used antibody as a surrogate measure of antigen-specific anti-tumor immunity [4,5,6], and we hypothesized that IgG antibody signals would be more likely to overlap with features of antigen-specific CD8+ T cell recognition than expected by chance. Potential mechanisms for such a relationship could occur via overlap with the underlying CD4+ T cell repertoire necessary for activating both CD8+ T cells and B cells, or from antibody-aided T cell activation via Fc receptor targeting of antigens to antigen presenting cells. Improved understanding of the antigen-specific relationships between antibody and T cell responses to tumor antigens could lead to improved immune monitoring for cancer patients and a deeper understanding of what features define clinically-relevant tumor antigens

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