Lymphodepleting chemotherapy potentiates neoantigen-directed T cell therapy by enhancing antigen presentation

Sagie S, Babu T, Weller C, Tabachnik C, Livneh I, Quast NP, Gumpert N, Shomuradova A, Raybould MI, Levy R, Malko D, Alfia A
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et al

Adoptive cell therapy (ACT) targeting tumor-specific antigens holds promise for solid tumors, but limited neoantigen presentation remains a key barrier to efficacy. Here, we identify and characterize a T cell receptor (TCR), T104, for the KRAS.G12V mutation, a prevalent neoantigen in colorectal, lung, and pancreatic cancers. TCR-T104 selectively recognizes and kills KRAS.G12V-expressing tumor cells. Combining T cell therapy with lymphodepleting chemotherapy significantly enhances tumor cell killing, particularly by TCR-T cells, tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs), and T cell engager antibodies across multiple cancer types and target antigens. Mechanistically, chemotherapy upregulates immunoproteasome activity and human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-I surface expression. HLA-immunopeptidome analyses reveal that chemotherapy remodels the antigenic landscape across tumor cell lines and in vivo models, increasing peptide abundance and hydrophobicity while altering proteasomal cleavage preferences. These findings establish a synergistic role for chemotherapy in enhancing neoantigen presentation and T cell-mediated tumor recognition and suggest that fine-tuning these regimens could improve ACT efficacy, particularly in tumors with low-abundance neoantigens.

Keywords:

32 Biomedical and Clinical Sciences

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3211 Oncology and Carcinogenesis

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3204 Immunology

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Rare Diseases

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Clinical Research

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Immunotherapy

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Pancreatic Cancer

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Orphan Drug

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Digestive Diseases

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Cancer

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Immunization

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Colo-Rectal Cancer

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Biotechnology

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5.2 Cellular and gene therapies

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Cancer

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Humans

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Antigens, Neoplasm

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Antigen Presentation

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Animals

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T-Lymphocytes

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Cell Line, Tumor

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Mice

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Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell

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Lymphocyte Depletion

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Immunotherapy, Adoptive

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Lymphocytes, Tumor-Infiltrating

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Proto-Oncogene Proteins p21(ras)

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Neoplasms