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Tetramer based approach for efficient identification and isolation of neo-antigen specific CD8 T cells from peripheral blood (PBL) of patients with metastatic cancers
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  1. Mini Bharathan1,
  2. Katarina Trebska-McGowan2,
  3. Pasetto Anna2,
  4. Drew C Deniger1,
  5. Ken-ichi Hanada2,
  6. Jared J Gartner2,
  7. James C Yang3,
  8. Steven A Rosenberg1 and
  9. Paul F Robbins3
  1. Aff1 grid.48336.3a0000000419368075NIH/NCI Bethesda MD USA
  2. Aff2 grid.94365.3d0000000122975165NIH/NCI Surgery Branch Bethesda MD USA
  3. Aff3 grid.94365.3d0000000122975165National Institutes of Health Bethesda MD USA

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Meeting abstracts

Background

Adoptive cell therapy with T cells bearing mutation specific T cell receptors (TCR) can be an effective method for treating metastatic cancers. The objective of this study was to identify mutation reactive T cells in the circulation of patients with different types of metastatic cancer.

Methods

The strategy utilized whole exome sequencing data to identify somatic non-synonymous mutations and then in-silico algorithms to predict minimal epitopes encoding mutated amino acids for each patient specific HLA-allele. CD8-enriched PBL from each patient were stained with tetramers generated in house by a UV-exchangeable technique as previously described for A*02:01, A*03:01, A*11:01, B*07:02, and a commercial tetramer was acquired for B*57:01. Based on the initial staining frequency (+tetramer+ T cells recognizing 7 unique neo-antigens from the PBL of 4 patients (ranging from 1 to 4 per patient). We enriched the frequencies of CD8+tetramer+ cells from 0.5 to >85%, 0.3 to >65% and 0.01 to 3% from the PBL of patients with colorectal (3971-A*02:01), lung (4014-B*57:01), and ovarian (4067-B*07:02) cancers respectively, using individual tetramers. Populations reactive with three HLA-A*11:0-restricted and one HLA-A*03:01-restricted neoantigens were also isolated from the PBL of lung cancer patients 4014 and 4037, respectively, using a pooled tetramer approach.

Results

Overall, the isolated T cells recognized mutated epitopes when co-cultured with autologous CD14+ monocytes pulsed with mutated peptides in the context of appropriate MHC-I alleles including HLA-A*02:01, HLA-A*03:01, HLA-A*11:01, HLA-B*07:02, and HLA-B*57:01, with reactivity detected using IFN-γ ELISA. Using single cell PCR, we could clone the TCRs reactive with an HLA-*02:01-presented colon cancer neoantigen and an HLA-B*57:01-presented lung cancer neoantigen. Evaluation of PBL retrovirally-transduced with these TCRs demonstrated that they bound to tetramers and secreted IFN-γ when co-cultured with CD14+ monocytes pulsed with appropriate mutated peptides.

Conclusions

To conclude, tetramers offer a sensitive, fast and reliable methodology to isolate mutation specific tumor reactive T cells from PBL of cancer patients. Furthermore, this method facilitates the identification, and cloning of mutation reactive TCR with which to construct receptor-engineered T cells for adoptive T cell therapy.