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Immunogenic cryptic peptides dominate the antigenic landscape of ovarian cancer

Remya Raja, Kiran K. Mangalaparthi, Anil K. Madugundu, Erik Jessen, Latha Pathangey, Paul M. Magtibay, Kristina Butler, Elizabeth L. Christie, Akhilesh Pandey, Marion Curtis

2025Science Advances17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Increased infiltration of CD3 + and CD8 + T cells into ovarian cancer (OC) is linked to better prognosis, but the specific antigens involved are unclear. Recent reports suggest that HLA class I can present peptides from noncoding genomic regions, known as noncanonical or cryptic peptides, but their immunogenicity is underexplored. To address this, we used immunopeptidomic analysis and RNA sequencing on five metastatic OC samples, which identified 311 cryptic peptides (40 to 83 per patient). Despite comprising less than 1% of total peptides, cryptic peptides from noncoding transcripts emerged as the predominant antigen class when compared to the other major classes of known tumor-specific and tumor-associated antigens in OC samples. Notably, nearly 70% of the prioritized cryptic peptides elicited T cell activation, as evidenced by increased 4-1BB and IFN-γ expression in autologous CD8 + T cells. This study reveals noncoding cryptic peptides as an important class of immunogenic antigens in OC.

Topics & Concepts

ImmunogenicityBiologyAntigenCD8Ovarian cancerImmune systemMolecular biologyComputational biologyGeneticsCancerImmunotherapy and Immune Responsesvaccines and immunoinformatics approachesCancer Immunotherapy and Biomarkers