Therapeutic potential of T cell receptor targeting the HLA-A*11:01-restricted KRASG12V neoantigen without cross-recognition of the self-antigen RAB7B in solid tumors
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Background Public neoantigens, including KRAS, TP53, and PIK3CA mutations, which are shared across various tumor types, have demonstrated significant immunogenicity and offer great promise for cancer immunotherapy. Clinical trials targeting these public neoantigens have yielded encouraging results, including tumor regression and prolonged relapse-free survival. This study evaluates the HLA binding properties of T cell epitopes derived from these public neoantigens to identify optimal T cell target, and further develops T cell receptor (TCR)-based therapeutics. Methods The binding properties of public neoantigens to HLA-I molecules were evaluated using peptide-HLA binding affinity and stability assays. Naive T cell repertoires were utilized to expand and detect neoantigen-specific TCRs. TCR clones were characterized for functionality using TCR-Jurkat cells and TCR-T cells. Peptide specificity was assessed using an HLA transgenic cell panel and the X-scan assay. In vivo anti-tumor efficacy of TCR-T cells was tested in xenograft mouse models of solid tumors. Results The analysis of HLA binding properties for public neoantigens revealed that HLA-A*11:01-presented KRAS G12V epitopes exhibited the strongest HLA binding stability. Four TCR clones specific to the 9-mer KRAS G12V peptide (KRAS G12V[9] ) were identified. All KRAS G12V[9] specific TCRs, both newly identified by us and previously reported, exhibited varying degrees of cross-recognition of the self-antigen RAB7B. Among the four TCR clones, one TCR (KT18) exhibited superior functional avidity, effectively recognizing and eliminating KRAS G12V mutant tumor cells without off-target activity against endogenous RAB7B or similar peptides. Significantly, KT18 TCR-T cells efficiently mediated tumor regression in multiple xenograft models of solid tumors. Conclusions These findings highlight significant differences in peptide-HLA binding affinity and stability across public neoantigen-HLA pairings. The cross-recognition of RAB7B 13-21 represents a critical safety consideration when developing HLA-A*11:01-restricted KRAS G12V[9] specific TCRs. KT18 TCR-T cells are highly cytotoxic, exhibiting no off-target recognition and significant potential for clinical applications against KRAS G12V -driven solid tumors.