Article
Author: Klaeger, Susan ; Jacks, Tyler ; Louvet, Cedric ; Hadrup, Sine R. ; Wolpin, Brian M. ; Su, Jennifer ; Wang, Xilin ; Agus, Miles P. ; Carr, Steven A. ; Raghavan, Srivatsan ; Clauser, Karl R. ; Kapner, Kevin S. ; Schmitt, Thomas ; Verzani, Eva K. ; Freed-Pastor, William A. ; Cleary, James M. ; Jaeger, Alex M. ; Gunaydin, Gurcan ; Lippincott, Isabelle E. ; Casarrubios, Marta ; Ely, Zackery A. ; Abelin, Jennifer G. ; Kulstad, Zachary J. ; Aguirre, Andrew J. ; Smith, Eric L. ; Greenberg, Philip D. ; Addepalli, Sudarsana ; Hennessey, Connor J.
Translation of the noncoding genome in cancer can generate cryptic (noncanonical) peptides capable of presentation by human leukocyte antigen class I (HLA-I); however, the cancer specificity and immunogenicity of noncanonical HLA-I–bound peptides (ncHLAp) are incompletely understood. Using high-resolution immunopeptidomics, we discovered that cryptic peptides are abundant in the pancreatic cancer immunopeptidome. Approximately 30% of ncHLAp exhibited cancer-restricted translation, and a substantial subset were shared among patients. Cancer-restricted ncHLAp displayed robust immunogenic potential in a sensitive ex vivo T cell priming platform. ncHLAp-reactive, T cell receptor–redirected T cells exhibited tumoricidal activity against patient-derived pancreatic cancer organoids. These findings demonstrate that pancreatic cancer harbors cancer-restricted ncHLAp that can be recognized by cytotoxic T cells. Future therapeutic strategies for pancreatic cancer, and potentially other solid tumors, may include targeting cryptic antigens.