Epigenetically controlled tumor antigens derived from splice junctions between exons and transposable elements

Marianne Burbage(Institut Curie), Ares Rocañín-Arjó(Institut Curie), Blandine Baudon(Institut Curie), Yago A. Arribas(Institut Curie), Antonela Merlotti(Institut Curie), Derek C. Rookhuizen(Institut Curie), Sandrine Heurtebise-Chrétien(Institut Curie), Mengliang Ye(Institut Curie), Alexandre Houy(Inserm), Nina Burgdorf(Institut Curie), Guadalupe Suárez(Institut Curie), Marine Gros(Institut Curie), Benjamin Sadacca(Inserm), Montserrat Carrascal(Institut d'Investigacions Biomèdiques de Barcelona), Andrea Garmilla(Institut Curie), Mylène Bohec(Université Paris Sciences et Lettres), Sylvain Baulande(Université Paris Sciences et Lettres), Bérangère Lombard(Université Paris Sciences et Lettres), Damarys Loew(Université Paris Sciences et Lettres), Joshua J. Waterfall(Inserm), Marc‐Henri Stern(Inserm), Christel Goudot(Institut Curie), Sebastián Amigorena(Institut Curie)
Science Immunology
February 3, 2023
Cited by 84

Abstract

Oncogenesis often implicates epigenetic alterations, including derepression of transposable elements (TEs) and defects in alternative splicing. Here, we explore the possibility that noncanonical splice junctions between exons and TEs represent a source of tumor-specific antigens. We show that mouse normal tissues and tumor cell lines express wide but distinct ranges of mRNA junctions between exons and TEs, some of which are tumor specific. Immunopeptidome analyses in tumor cell lines identified peptides derived from exon-TE splicing junctions associated to MHC-I molecules. Exon-TE junction–derived peptides were immunogenic in tumor-bearing mice. Both prophylactic and therapeutic vaccinations with junction-derived peptides delayed tumor growth in vivo. Inactivation of the TE-silencing histone 3–lysine 9 methyltransferase Setdb1 caused overexpression of new immunogenic junctions in tumor cells. Our results identify exon-TE splicing junctions as epigenetically controlled, immunogenic, and protective tumor antigens in mice, opening possibilities for tumor targeting and vaccination in patients with cancer.


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