4.7 Article

Peptide absent sequences emerging in human cancers

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 196, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejca.2023.113421

Keywords

Cancer; Detection; Peptides; Absent

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The study reveals that nullpeptides can serve as biomarkers for cancer detection and treatment, particularly in highly recurrent cancer patients. These nullpeptides primarily occur in highly expressed genes, particularly in specific loci of oncogenes and tumor suppressors. Recurrent nullpeptides are more likely to be found in neoantigens, which play a significant role in immunotherapy.
Early diagnosis of cancer can significantly improve survival of cancer patients; however sensitive and highly specific biomarkers for cancer detection are currently lacking for most cancer types. Nullpeptides are short peptides that are absent from the human proteome. Here, we examined the emergence of nullpeptides during cancer development. We analyzed 3,600,964 somatic mutations across 10,064 whole exome sequencing tumor samples spanning 32 cancer types. We analyze RNA-seq data from primary tumor samples to identify the subset of nullpeptides that emerge in highly expresed genes. We show that nullpeptides, and particularly the subset that is highly recurrent across cancer patients, can be identified in tumor biopsy samples. We find that cancer genes show an excess of nullpeptides and detect nullpeptide hotspots in specific loci of oncogenes and tumor suppressors. We also observe that recurrent nullpeptides are more likely to be found in neoantigens, which have been shown to be effective targets for immunotherapy, suggesting that they can be used to prioritize candidates. Our findings provide evidence for the utility of nullpeptides as cancer detection and therapeutic biomarkers.

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