作者
Xiaoye Ma,Nadeem Riaz,Robert M. Samstein,Mark Lee,Vladimir Makarov,Cristina Valero,Diego Chowell,Fengshen Kuo,Douglas R. Hoen,Conall Fitzgerald,Hui Jiang,Jonathan Alektiar,Tyler Alban,Ivan Jurić,Prerana Bangalore Parthasarathy,Yu Zhao,Erich Sabio,Richa Verma,Raghvendra M. Srivastava,Lynda Vuong,Wei Yang,Xiao Zhang,Jingming Wang,Lawrence K Chu,Stephen L Wang,Daniel Kelly,Xin Pei,Jiapeng Chen,Rona Yaeger,Dmitriy Zamarin,Ahmet Zehir,Mithat Gönen,Luc G.T. Morris,Timothy A. Chan
摘要
Defects in pathways governing genomic fidelity have been linked to improved response to immune checkpoint blockade therapy (ICB). Pathogenic POLE/POLD1 mutations can cause hypermutation, yet how diverse mutations in POLE/POLD1 influence antitumor immunity following ICB is unclear. Here, we comprehensively determined the effect of POLE/POLD1 mutations in ICB and elucidated the mechanistic impact of these mutations on tumor immunity. Murine syngeneic tumors harboring Pole/Pold1 functional mutations displayed enhanced antitumor immunity and were sensitive to ICB. Patients with POLE/POLD1 mutated tumors harboring telltale mutational signatures respond better to ICB than patients harboring wild-type or signature-negative tumors. A mutant POLE/D1 function-associated signature-based model outperformed several traditional approaches for identifying POLE/POLD1 mutated patients that benefit from ICB. Strikingly, the spectrum of mutational signatures correlates with the biochemical features of neoantigens. Alterations that cause POLE/POLD1 function-associated signatures generate T cell receptor (TCR)-contact residues with increased hydrophobicity, potentially facilitating T cell recognition. Altogether, the functional landscapes of POLE/POLD1 mutations shape immunotherapy efficacy.