Melanoma Lesions Independently Acquire T-cell Resistance during Metastatic Latency

Fang Zhao(Düsseldorf University Hospital), Antje Sucker(Düsseldorf University Hospital), Susanne Horn(Düsseldorf University Hospital), Christina Heeke(Düsseldorf University Hospital), Nicola Bielefeld(Düsseldorf University Hospital), Barbara Schrörs(Goethe University Frankfurt), Anne Bicker(Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz), Monika Lindemann(Essen University Hospital), Alexander Roesch(Düsseldorf University Hospital), Gustav Gaudernack(Oslo University Hospital), Mathias Stiller(Düsseldorf University Hospital), Jürgen C. Becker(Düsseldorf University Hospital), Volker Lennerz(Goethe University Frankfurt), Thomas Wölfel(Goethe University Frankfurt), Dirk Schadendorf(Düsseldorf University Hospital), Klaus Griewank(Düsseldorf University Hospital), Annette Paschen(Düsseldorf University Hospital)
Cancer Research
June 3, 2016
Cited by 73

Abstract

Melanoma often recurs after a latency period of several years, presenting a T cell-edited phenotype that reflects a role for CD8(+) T cells in maintaining metastatic latency. Here, we report an investigation of a patient with multiple recurrent lesions, where poorly immunogenic melanoma phenotypes were found to evolve in the presence of autologous tumor antigen-specific CD8(+) T cells. Melanoma cells from two of three late recurrent metastases, developing within a 6-year latency period, lacked HLA class I expression. CD8(+) T cell-resistant, HLA class I-negative tumor cells became clinically apparent 1.5 and 6 years into stage IV disease. Genome profiling by SNP arrays revealed that HLA class I loss in both metastases originated from a shared chromosome 15q alteration and independently acquired focal B2M gene deletions. A third HLA class I haplotype-deficient lesion developed in year 3 of stage IV disease that acquired resistance toward dominant CD8(+) T-cell clonotypes targeting stage III tumor cells. At an early stage, melanoma cells showed a dedifferentiated c-Jun(high)/MITF(low) phenotype, possibly associated with immunosuppression, which contrasted with a c-Jun(low)/MITF(high) phenotype of T cell-edited tumor cells derived from late metastases. In summary, our work shows how tumor recurrences after long-term latency evolve toward T-cell resistance by independent genetic events, as a means for immune escape and immunotherapeutic resistance. Cancer Res; 76(15); 4347-58. ©2016 AACR.


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