Content area

Abstract

The impact of cancer driving mutations in regulating immunosurveillance throughout tumor development remains poorly understood. To better understand the contribution of tumor genotype to immunosurveillance, we generated and validated lentiviral vectors that create increasingly immunogenic neoantigens. This vector system is compatible with autochthonous Cre-regulated cancer models, CRISPR/Cas9-mediated somatic genome editing, and tumor barcoding. Here, we show that in the context of oncogenic KRAS-driven lung cancer and strong neoantigen expression, tumor suppressor genotype dictates the degree of immune cell recruitment, positive selection of tumors with neoantigen silencing, and tumor outgrowth. By quantifying the impact of 11 commonly inactivated tumor suppressor genes on tumor growth across neoantigenic contexts, we show that the growth promoting effects of tumor suppressor gene inactivation correlate with increasing sensitivity to immunosurveillance. Importantly, some genotypes also dramatically changed sensitivity to immunosurveillance independently of their growth promoting effects. We propose a model of immunoediting in which tumor suppressor gene inactivation works in tandem with neoantigen expression to shape tumor immunosurveillance and immunoediting such that the same neoantigens uniquely modulate tumor immunoediting depending on the genetic context.

Details

1010268
Title
Tumor Suppressor Genotype Influences the Extent and Mode of Immunosurveillance in Lung Cancer
Number of pages
121
Publication year
2025
Degree date
2025
School code
0175
Source
DAI-B 87/3(E), Dissertation Abstracts International
ISBN
9798293803569
Committee member
Stanger, Ben Z.; Vonderheide, Robert H.; Huang, Alexander C.; Shi, Junwei
University/institution
University of Pennsylvania
Department
Cell and Molecular Biology
University location
United States -- Pennsylvania
Degree
Ph.D.
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language
English
Document type
Dissertation/Thesis
Dissertation/thesis number
32121404
ProQuest document ID
3246027324
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/dissertations-theses/tumor-suppressor-genotype-influences-extent-mode/docview/3246027324/se-2?accountid=208611
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.
Database
ProQuest One Academic