Abstract
T cell receptor (TCR)-T cell immunotherapy, in which T cells are engineered to express a TCR targeting a tumor epitope, is a form of adoptive cell therapy (ACT) that has exhibited promise against various tumor types. Mutants of oncoprotein KRAS, particularly at glycine-12 (G12), are frequent drivers of tumorigenicity, making them attractive targets for TCR-T cell therapy. However, class I-restricted TCRs specifically targeting G12-mutant KRAS epitopes in the context of tumors expressing HLA-A2, the most common human HLA-A allele, have remained elusive despite evidence an epitope encompassing such mutations can bind HLA-A2 and induce T cell responses. We report post-translational modifications (PTMs) on this epitope may allow tumor cells to evade immunologic pressure from TCR-T cells. A lysine side chain-methylated KRASG12V peptide, rather than the unmodified epitope, may be presented in HLA-A2 by tumor cells and impact TCR recognition. Using a novel computationally guided approach, we developed by mutagenesis TCRs that recognize this methylated peptide, enhancing tumor recognition and destruction. Additionally, we identified TCRs with similar functional activity in normal repertoires from primary T cells by stimulation with modified peptide, clonal expansion, and selection. Mechanistically, a gene knockout screen to identify mechanism(s) by which tumor cells methylate/demethylate this epitope unveiled SPT6 as a demethylating protein that could be targeted to improve effectiveness of these new TCRs. Our findings highlight the role of PTMs in immune evasion and suggest identifying and targeting such modifications should make effective ACTs available for a substantially greater range of tumors than the current therapeutic landscape.
One-sentence summary Tumor cell methylation of KRASG12V epitope in HLA-A2 permits immune evasion, and new TCRs were generated to overcome this with engineered cell therapy.
Competing Interest Statement
P.D.G. is on the Scientific Advisory Board of Celsius, Earli, Elpiscience, Immunoscape, Rapt, Catalio, and Nextech, was a scientific founder of Juno Therapeutics, and receives research support from Lonza. R.P., T.M., A.G.C., T.M.S., and P.D.G. are co-inventors on a patent associated with technology described in this work that is licensed to Affini-T. A.G.C., T.M.S., and P.D.G. are co-founders of, have equity in, and receive research support from Affini-T.
Footnotes
Clarified main text to reflect the translational importance of the findings. Updated main figures. Shortened title.