Neoantigens, which are expressed on tumor cells, are one of the main targets of an effective antitumor T-cell response. Cancer immunotherapies to target neoantigens are of growing interest and are in early human trials, but methods to identify neoantigens either require invasive or difficult-to-obtain clinical specimens, require the screening of hundreds to thousands of synthetic peptides or tandem minigenes, or are only relevant to specific human leukocyte antigen (HLA) alleles. We apply deep learning to a large (N = 74 patients) HLA peptide and genomic dataset from various human tumors to create a computational model of antigen presentation for neoantigen prediction. We show that our model, named EDGE, increases the positive predictive value of HLA antigen prediction by up to ninefold. We apply EDGE to enable identification of neoantigens and neoantigen-reactive T cells using routine clinical specimens and small numbers of synthetic peptides for most common HLA alleles. EDGE could enable an improved ability to develop neoantigen-targeted immunotherapies for cancer patients.

Deep learning using tumor HLA peptide mass spectrometry datasets improves neoantigen identification

Scagliotti, Giorgio;Bironzo, Paolo;Novello, Silvia;
2018-01-01

Abstract

Neoantigens, which are expressed on tumor cells, are one of the main targets of an effective antitumor T-cell response. Cancer immunotherapies to target neoantigens are of growing interest and are in early human trials, but methods to identify neoantigens either require invasive or difficult-to-obtain clinical specimens, require the screening of hundreds to thousands of synthetic peptides or tandem minigenes, or are only relevant to specific human leukocyte antigen (HLA) alleles. We apply deep learning to a large (N = 74 patients) HLA peptide and genomic dataset from various human tumors to create a computational model of antigen presentation for neoantigen prediction. We show that our model, named EDGE, increases the positive predictive value of HLA antigen prediction by up to ninefold. We apply EDGE to enable identification of neoantigens and neoantigen-reactive T cells using routine clinical specimens and small numbers of synthetic peptides for most common HLA alleles. EDGE could enable an improved ability to develop neoantigen-targeted immunotherapies for cancer patients.
2018
Dec 17
37 (1)
55
71
http://www.nature.com/nbt/index.html
Biotechnology; Bioengineering; Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology; Molecular Medicine; Biomedical Engineering
Bulik-Sullivan, Brendan; Busby, Jennifer; Palmer, Christine D.; Davis, Matthew J.; Murphy, Tyler; Clark, Andrew; Busby, Michele; Duke, Fujiko; Yang, Aaron; Young, Lauren; Ojo, Noelle C.; Caldwell, Kamilah; Abhyankar, Jesse; Boucher, Thomas; Hart, Meghan G.; Makarov, Vladimir; De Montpreville, Vincent Thomas; Mercier, Olaf; Chan, Timothy A.; Scagliotti, Giorgio; Bironzo, Paolo; Novello, Silvia; Karachaliou, Niki; Rosell, Rafael; Anderson, Ian; Gabrail, Nashat; Hrom, John; Limvarapuss, Chainarong; Choquette, Karin; Spira, Alexander; Rousseau, Raphael; Voong, Cynthia; Rizvi, Naiyer A.; Fadel, Elie; Frattini, Mark; Jooss, Karin; Skoberne, Mojca; Francis, Joshua; Yelensky, Roman
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/1689558
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