4.7 Article

Autoantibody Landscape in Patients with Advanced Prostate Cancer

Journal

CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 26, Issue 23, Pages 6204-6214

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-20-1966

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Funding

  1. Stand Up To Cancer-Prostate Cancer Foundation-Prostate Dream Team Translational Cancer Research Grant
  2. Movember Foundation
  3. Swedish Research Council (Vetenskapsradet) [2018-00382]
  4. Swedish Society of Medicine (Svenska Lakaresallskapet)
  5. Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy
  6. Ressler Family Fund
  7. NIH [R35 CA197633, P01 CA244118, NIH/NIAID 5K08AI139375-02, NIH/NCI 1R01CA230516-01, NIH/NCI 1R01CA227025-01A1, NIH 2U10CA180868-06, NIH P50CA186786]
  8. Prostate Cancer Foundation
  9. American Association for Cancer Research
  10. Swedish Research Council [2018-00382] Funding Source: Swedish Research Council

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Purpose: Autoantibody responses in cancer are of great interest, as they may be concordant with T-cell responses to cancer antigens or predictive of response to cancer immunotherapies. Thus, we sought to characterize the antibody landscape of metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). Experimental Design: Serum antibody epitope repertoire analysis (SERA) was performed on patient serum to identify tumor-specific neoepitopes. Somatic mutation-specific neoepitopes were investigated by associating serum epitope enrichment scores with whole-genome sequencing results from paired solid tumor metastasis biopsies and germline blood samples. A protein-based immunome-wide association study (PIWAS) was performed to identify significantly enriched epitopes, and candidate serum antibodies enriched in select patients were validated by ELISA profiling. A distinct cohort of patients with melanoma was evaluated to validate the top cancer-specific epitopes. Results: SERA was performed on 1,229 serum samples obtained from 72 men with mCRPC and 1,157 healthy control patients. Twenty-nine of 6,636 somatic mutations (0.44%) were associated with an antibody response specific to the mutated peptide. PIWAS analyses identified motifs in 11 proteins, including NY-ESO-1 and HERVK-113, as immunogenic in mCRPC, and ELISA confirmed serum antibody enrichment in candidate patients. Confirmatory PIWAS, Identifying Motifs Using Next-generation sequencing Experiments (IMUNE), and ELISA analyses performed on serum samples from 106 patients with melanoma similarly revealed enriched cancer-specific antibody responses to NY-ESO-1. Conclusions: We present the first large-scale profiling of auto-antibodies in advanced prostate cancer, utilizing a new antibody profiling approach to reveal novel cancer-specific antigens and epitopes. Our study recovers antigens of known importance and identifies novel tumor-specific epitopes of translational interest.

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