Nature Communications (Feb 2025)

A minimal gene set characterizes TIL specific for diverse tumor antigens across different cancer types

  • Zhen Zeng,
  • Tianbei Zhang,
  • Jiajia Zhang,
  • Shuai Li,
  • Sydney Connor,
  • Boyang Zhang,
  • Yimin Zhao,
  • Jordan Wilson,
  • Dipika Singh,
  • Rima Kulikauskas,
  • Candice D. Church,
  • Thomas H. Pulliam,
  • Saumya Jani,
  • Paul Nghiem,
  • Suzanne L. Topalian,
  • Patrick M. Forde,
  • Drew M. Pardoll,
  • Hongkai Ji,
  • Kellie N. Smith

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-55059-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 1 – 17

Abstract

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Abstract Identifying tumor-specific T cell clones that mediate immunotherapy responses remains challenging. Mutation-associated neoantigen (MANA) -specific CD8+ tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) have been shown to express high levels of CXCL13 and CD39 (ENTPD1), and low IL-7 receptor (IL7R) levels in many cancer types, but their collective relevance to T cell functionality has not been established. Here we present an integrative tool to identify MANA-specific TIL using weighted expression levels of these three genes in lung cancer and melanoma single-cell RNAseq datasets. Our three-gene “MANAscore” algorithm outperforms other RNAseq-based algorithms in identifying validated neoantigen-specific CD8+ clones, and accurately identifies TILs that recognize other classes of tumor antigens, including cancer testis antigens, endogenous retroviruses and viral oncogenes. Most of these TIL are characterized by a tissue resident memory gene expression program. Putative tumor-reactive cells (pTRC) identified via MANAscore in anti-PD-1-treated lung tumors had higher expression of checkpoint and cytotoxicity-related genes relative to putative non-tumor-reactive cells. pTRC in pathologically responding tumors showed distinguished gene expression patterns and trajectories. Collectively, we show that MANAscore is a robust tool that can greatly enrich candidate tumor-specific T cells and be used to understand the functional programming of tumor-reactive TIL.