Autoimmune alleles at the major histocompatibility locus modify melanoma susceptibility

James V. Talwar(University of California San Diego), David Laub(University of California San Diego), Meghana S. Pagadala(University of California San Diego), Andrea Castro(University of California San Diego), McKenna Lewis(University of California San Diego), E. Georg Luebeck(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Bryan R. Gorman(Booz Allen Hamilton (United States)), Cuiping Pan, Frederick N. Dong(Booz Allen Hamilton (United States)), Kyriacos Markianos(Broad Institute), Craig C. Teerlink(University of Utah), Julie A. Lynch(University of Utah), Richard L. Hauger(University of California San Diego), Saiju Pyarajan(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Philip S. Tsao(Palo Alto University), Gerald P. Morris(University of California San Diego), Rany M. Salem(University of California San Diego), Wesley K. Thompson(Laureate Institute for Brain Research), Kit Curtius(University of California San Diego), Maurizio Zanetti(University of California San Diego), Hannah Carter(University of California San Diego)
The American Journal of Human Genetics
June 19, 2023
Cited by 4Open Access
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Abstract

T cells have been shown to target melanocyte-specific peptide antigens more often than melanoma-specific antigens, we investigated whether vitiligo- and psoriasis-predisposing MHC-I alleles conferred a melanoma-protective effect. In individuals with cutaneous melanoma from both The Cancer Genome Atlas (n = 451) and an independent validation set (n = 586), MHC-I autoimmune-allele carrier status was significantly associated with a later age of melanoma diagnosis. Furthermore, MHC-I autoimmune-allele carriers were significantly associated with decreased risk of developing melanoma in the Million Veteran Program (OR = 0.962, p = 0.024). Existing melanoma polygenic risk scores (PRSs) did not predict autoimmune-allele carrier status, suggesting these alleles provide orthogonal risk-relevant information. Mechanisms of autoimmune protection were neither associated with improved melanoma-driver mutation association nor improved gene-level conserved antigen presentation relative to common alleles. However, autoimmune alleles showed higher affinity relative to common alleles for particular windows of melanocyte-conserved antigens and loss of heterozygosity of autoimmune alleles caused the greatest reduction in presentation for several conserved antigens across individuals with loss of HLA alleles. Overall, this study presents evidence that MHC-I autoimmune-risk alleles modulate melanoma risk unaccounted for by current PRSs.


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