Insertion-and-deletion-derived tumour-specific neoantigens and the immunogenic phenotype: a pan-cancer analysis
The Francis Crick Institute · National Health Service · +8 more institutions
Abstract
The focus of tumour-specific antigen analyses has been on single nucleotide variants (SNVs), with the contribution of small insertions and deletions (indels) less well characterised. We investigated whether the frameshift nature of indel mutations, which create novel open reading frames and a large quantity of mutagenic peptides highly distinct from self, might contribute to the immunogenic phenotype.
We analysed whole-exome sequencing data from 5777 solid tumours, spanning 19 cancer types from The Cancer Genome Atlas. We compared the proportion and number of indels across the cohort, with a subset of results replicated in two independent datasets. We assessed in-silico tumour-specific neoantigen predictions by mutation type with pan-cancer analysis, together with RNAseq profiling in renal clear cell carcinoma cases (n=392), to compare immune gene expression across patient subgroups. Associations between indel burden and treatment response were assessed across four checkpoint inhibitor datasets.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 74.87
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 74
Authors
20- STSamra Turajlic
The Francis Crick Institute, National Health Service, Royal Marsden Hospital
- KLKevin Litchfield
The Francis Crick Institute
- HXHang Xu
The Francis Crick Institute
- RRRachel Rosenthal
CRUK Lung Cancer Centre of Excellence, London Cancer, University College London, Cancer Research UK
- NMNicholas McGranahan
Cancer Research UK, London Cancer, University College London, CRUK Lung Cancer Centre of Excellence, The Francis Crick Institute
Topics & keywords
- Indel
- Biology
- Frameshift mutation
- Genetics
- Cancer
- In silico
- Gene
- Mutation