1. Mice developing mammary tumors evolve T cell sequences shared with human breast cancer patients
- Author
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Hagit Philip, Gur Yaari, Raanan Margalit, Christopher Clouser, Sol Efroni, Moriah Gidoni, Alona Zilberberg, Francois Vigneault, Irun R. Cohen, Kristofor Adams, and Miri Gordin
- Subjects
biology ,Transgene ,T cell ,medicine.medical_treatment ,CD44 ,T-cell receptor ,Immunotherapy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immune system ,Cancer immunotherapy ,biology.protein ,medicine ,Cancer research ,Receptor - Abstract
Cancer immunotherapy by checkpoint blockade proves that an effective immune response to a tumor can be induced clinically. However, little is known about the evolution of tumor-associated T-cell receptor (TCR) repertoires without intervention. Here we studied TCR repertoire evolution in mice spontaneously developing mammary tumors; we sequenced peripheral blood alpha and beta TCRs of CD4+CD62L+CD44− T cells monthly for 8 months in 10 FVB/NJ mice transgenic at the Erbb2 locus, all developing tumors; 5 FVB/NJ mice without the transgene were age-matched controls. Sequences were either private (restricted to one mouse) or public (shared among mice); public sequences were either exclusive to the tumor group or inclusive among different groups. We now report that 1), public AA sequences were each encoded by many different nucleotide sequences (NT) recombinations (convergent recombination; CR); 2) mice developing tumors evolved tumor-exclusive public sequences, derived initially from private or from inclusive public sequences; and 3) tumor-exclusive public sequences in mice were also present among published public TCR sequences from human breast cancer patients. These cross-species tumor-exclusive TCR sequences manifested high CR; but the AA sequences shared by mice and humans did not share NT sequences. Thus, tumor-exclusive TCR AA sequences across species are selected from different NT recombination events. The roles of tumor-exclusive TCR repertoires in advancing or inhibiting tumor development and the effects of tumor immunotherapy on these T cells remain to be seen.
- Published
- 2018
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