Identification and targeting of mutant peptide neoantigens in cancer immunotherapy
Author(s)
Verdon, DJ; Jenkins, MR;
Details
Publication Year 2021-08-23,Volume 13,Issue #16,Page 4245
Journal Title
Cancers
Abstract
In recent decades, adoptive cell transfer and checkpoint blockade therapies have revolutionized immunotherapeutic approaches to cancer treatment. Advances in whole exome/genome sequencing and bioinformatic detection of tumour-specific genetic variations and the amino acid sequence alterations they induce have revealed that T cell mediated anti-tumour immunity is substantially directed at mutated peptide sequences, and the identification and therapeutic targeting of patient-specific mutated peptide antigens now represents an exciting and rapidly progressing frontier of personalized medicine in the treatment of cancer. This review outlines the historical identification and validation of mutated peptide neoantigens as a target of the immune system, and the technical development of bioinformatic and experimental strategies for detecting, confirming and prioritizing both patient-specific or "private" and frequently occurring, shared "public" neoantigenic targets. Further, we examine the range of therapeutic modalities that have demonstrated preclinical and clinical anti-tumour efficacy through specifically targeting neoantigens, including adoptive T cell transfer, checkpoint blockade and neoantigen vaccination.
Publisher
MDPI
Research Division(s)
Immunology
PubMed ID
34439399
Open Access at Publisher's Site
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13164245
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


Creation Date: 2021-09-17 11:23:25
Last Modified: 2021-09-17 12:00:22
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