Evolutionary Pressure against MHC Class II Binding Cancer Mutations
Author(s) -
Rachel Marty Pyke,
Wesley Kurt Thompson,
Rany M. Salem,
Joan Font-Burgada,
Maurizio Zanetti,
Hannah Carter
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2018.08.048
Subject(s) - biology , major histocompatibility complex , mhc class i , carcinogenesis , cd8 , mhc restriction , genetics , cytotoxic t cell , mutation , immune system , immunology , cancer research , cancer , gene , in vitro
The anti-cancer immune response against mutated peptides of potential immunological relevance (neoantigens) is primarily attributed to MHC-I-restricted cytotoxic CD8 + T cell responses. MHC-II-restricted CD4 + T cells also drive anti-tumor responses, but their relation to neoantigen selection and tumor evolution has not been systematically studied. Modeling the potential of an individual's MHC-II genotype to present 1,018 driver mutations in 5,942 tumors, we demonstrate that the MHC-II genotype constrains the mutational landscape during tumorigenesis in a manner complementary to MHC-I. Mutations poorly bound to MHC-II are positively selected during tumorigenesis, even more than mutations poorly bound to MHC-I. This emphasizes the importance of CD4 + T cells in anti-tumor immunity. In addition, we observed less inter-patient variation in mutation presentation for MHC-II than for MHC-I. These differences were reflected by age at diagnosis, which was correlated with presentation by MHC-I only. Collectively, our results emphasize the central role of MHC-II presentation in tumor evolution.
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