- Chen, William S;
- Haynes, Winston A;
- Waitz, Rebecca;
- Kamath, Kathy;
- Vega-Crespo, Agustin;
- Shrestha, Raunak;
- Zhang, Minlu;
- Foye, Adam;
- Carretero, Ignacio Baselga;
- Garcilazo, Ivan Perez;
- Zhang, Meng;
- Zhao, Shuang G;
- Sjöström, Martin;
- Quigley, David A;
- Chou, Jonathan;
- Beer, Tomasz M;
- Rettig, Matthew;
- Gleave, Martin;
- Evans, Christopher P;
- Lara, Primo;
- N., Kim;
- Reiter, Robert E;
- Alumkal, Joshi J;
- Ashworth, Alan;
- Aggarwal, Rahul;
- Small, Eric J;
- Daugherty, Patrick S;
- Ribas, Antoni;
- Oh, David Y;
- Shon, John C;
- Feng, Felix Y
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 autoantibodies 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.