Publication
Mass spectrometry-based identification of a B-cell maturation antigen-derived T-cell epitope for antigen-specific immunotherapy of multiple myeloma
Journal Paper/Review - Feb 28, 2020
Bilich Tatjana, Stevanovic Stefan, Rammensee Hans-Georg, Neidert Marian Christoph, Schuhmacher Juliane, Lübke Maren, Marcu Ana, Besemer Britta, Weisel Katja, Salih Helmut R, Roerden Malte, Walz Simon, Bauer Jens, Nelde Annika, Walz Juliane S
Units
PubMed
Doi
Citation
Type
Journal
Publication Date
Issn Electronic
Pages
Brief description/objective
The B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA) is currently being evaluated as promising tumor-associated surface antigen for T-cell-based immunotherapy approaches, such as CAR T cells and bispecific antibodies, in multiple myeloma (MM). Cytotoxic T cells bearing BCMA-specific T-cell receptors might further allow targeting HLA-presented antigens derived from the intracellular domain of BCMA. By analyzing a mass spectrometry-acquired immunopeptidome dataset of primary MM samples and MM cell lines for BCMA-derived HLA ligands, we identified the naturally presented HLA-B*18-restricted ligand P(BCMA). Additionally, P(BCMA) was identified on primary CLL samples, thereby expanding the range for possible applications. P(BCMA) induced multifunctional BCMA-specific cells de novo from naïve CD8 T cells of healthy volunteers. These T cells exhibited antigen-specific lysis of autologous peptide-loaded cells. Even in the immunosuppressive context of MM, we detected spontaneous memory T-cell responses against P(BCMA) in patients. By applying CTLA-4 and PD-1 inhibition in vitro we induced multifunctional P(BCMA)-specific CD8 T cells in MM patients lacking preexisting BCMA-directed immune responses. Finally, we could show antigen-specific lysis of autologous peptide-loaded target cells and even MM.1S cells naturally presenting P(BCMA) using patient-derived P(BCMA)-specific T cells. Hence, this BCMA-derived T-cell epitope represents a promising target for T-cell-based immunotherapy and monitoring following immunotherapy in B-cell malignancy patients.