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Accounting for proximal variants improves neoantigen prediction.

Authors :
Hundal J
Kiwala S
Feng YY
Liu CJ
Govindan R
Chapman WC
Uppaluri R
Swamidass SJ
Griffith OL
Mardis ER
Griffith M
Source :
Nature genetics [Nat Genet] 2019 Jan; Vol. 51 (1), pp. 175-179. Date of Electronic Publication: 2018 Dec 03.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Recent efforts to design personalized cancer immunotherapies use predicted neoantigens, but most neoantigen prediction strategies do not consider proximal (nearby) variants that alter the peptide sequence and may influence neoantigen binding. We evaluated somatic variants from 430 tumors to understand how proximal somatic and germline alterations change the neoantigenic peptide sequence and also affect neoantigen binding predictions. On average, 241 missense somatic variants were analyzed per sample. Of these somatic variants, 5% had one or more in-phase missense proximal variants. Without incorporating proximal variant correction for major histocompatibility complex class I neoantigen peptides, the overall false discovery rate (incorrect neoantigens predicted) and the false negative rate (strong-binding neoantigens missed) across peptides of lengths 8-11 were estimated as 0.069 (6.9%) and 0.026 (2.6%), respectively.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1546-1718
Volume :
51
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
30510237
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41588-018-0283-9