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1 e generating tumor-specific mutant peptides (neoantigens).
2 gnizable immunogenic peptides, also known as neoantigens.
3 leukocyte antigens or depletion of expressed neoantigens.
4 ses against tumor-associated antigens and/or neoantigens.
5 n and the display of potentially immunogenic neoantigens.
6 ral defence genes and potentially expressing neoantigens.
7 ng novel protein sequences and a plethora of neoantigens.
8 ng, or copy-number loss of previously clonal neoantigens.
9 proach for inducing T cell immunity to tumor neoantigens.
10  an additional, unrecognized source of tumor neoantigens.
11 pertoire of somatic mutations and associated neoantigens.
12 lective pressure against gene fusion-derived neoantigens.
13 quencing the patient's tumor DNA to discover neoantigens.
14 nabling more sensitive discovery of putative neoantigens.
15  improving algorithms to predict immunogenic neoantigens.
16 ence of an adaptive immune response to these neoantigens.
17 pplied to targeting other tumors with public neoantigens.
18 ing lymphocytes (TILs) that recognize cancer neoantigens.
19 us single-nucleotide variants (SNVs), or SNV neoantigens.
20 hemotherapy by leveraging responses to tumor neoantigens.
21 fusions in prostate cancers that may produce neoantigens.
22 s and immunotherapeutic approaches targeting neoantigens.
23  as compared with non-synonymous SNV derived neoantigens.
24 finity recognizing distinct conformations of neoantigens.
25 g is an effective platform to uncover tumour neoantigens.
26 ly applied to identify mutations and predict neoantigens.
27  of identified variant peptides and putative neoantigens.
28 ated antigens, oncofetal antigens and shared neoantigens.
29 h the presence of T cells directed at cancer neoantigens, a class of HLA-bound peptides that arise fr
30 he TIL infusion and recognized two KRAS-G12D neoantigens, a nonamer and a decamer, all restricted by
31  SNP-7/8a delivering in silico-designed mock neoantigens also induced CD8 T cells in nonhuman primate
32 s often the major criterion for prioritizing neoantigens, although little progress has been made towa
33 ive to immunotherapy because of dMMR-induced neoantigens and activation of the cGAS-STING pathway.
34 dentification of patient-specific mutations, neoantigens and biomarkers, and facilitated by advances
35  T cells specific for immunoglobulin-derived neoantigens and found these cells could mediate killing
36  which can trigger an increased abundance of neoantigens and greater mutant-binding specificity.
37 clones with specificity to both high-quality neoantigens and predicted cross-reactive microbial epito
38 insights demonstrating the interplay between neoantigens and the immune system in untreated non-small
39                               This source of neoantigens and the method to discover them may be usefu
40            The identification of immunogenic neoantigens and their cognate T cells represents the mos
41 as a contiguous means of predicting putative neoantigens and their corresponding recognition potentia
42 rlapping with that of MHC class I-restricted neoantigens and therefore needs to be considered when id
43 f potential signaling and metabolic targets, neoantigens, and biomarkers.
44 f potential signaling and metabolic targets, neoantigens, and biomarkers.
45 patients do not express, or express too few, neoantigens, and hence are less responsive to immune the
46 ation of naturally processed ligands, cancer neoantigens, and T cell epitopes.
47  technological advances utilized to identify neoantigens, and the T cells that recognize them, in ind
48 lockade response, including those related to neoantigens, antigen presentation, DNA repair, and oncog
49                  Furthermore, recognition of neoantigens appears an important driver of the clinical
50 d cancer vaccines targeting patient-specific neoantigens are a promising cancer treatment modality; h
51             Importantly, these properties of neoantigens are also predictive in human datasets, sugge
52  predicts that, without immune escape, tumor neoantigens are either clonal or at low frequency; hyper
53                       Furthermore, predicted neoantigens are identified and associated with character
54  However, only a small fraction of predicted neoantigens are immunogenic.
55                     The sequence of these FS neoantigens are predictable, allowing creation of a pept
56 s have demonstrated that T cells recognizing neoantigens are present in most cancers and offer a spec
57              Although the majority of cancer neoantigens are unique to each patient, and therefore no
58         IgE-mediated reactions towards these neoantigens are well studied; however, IgE-independent r
59                                              Neoantigens arise from mutations in cancer cells and are
60 ce suggesting that T cells that target tumor neoantigens arising from cancer mutations are the main m
61 e patient's immune response to their tumor's neoantigens arising from DNA mutations.
62 he main target of tumor-specific T cells are neoantigens arising from mutations in self-proteins.
63 ion of minor histocompatibility antigens and neoantigens arising from personal somatic alterations or
64                                              Neoantigens arising from these mutations are distinctly
65 R and MPL mutations provide a rich source of neoantigens as a result of their unique ability to bind
66 ons and reduced expression of genes encoding neoantigens as potential mediators of resistance to immu
67  implicate immunological ignorance of clonal neoantigens as the basis for ineffective T cell immunity
68 peptides (both tumor-associated antigens and neoantigens), as well as to other pathogens beyond tetan
69         In addition to identifying candidate neoantigens associated with fusions, we were able to use
70 ess by mutations, abundant mutations release neoantigens, attracting anti-cancer immune cells.
71 of the major obstacles to using personalized neoantigen-based cancer immunotherapy.
72 ally tailor neoantigens could facilitate the neoantigen-based translational immunotherapy research.TR
73                In this study, we developed a neoantigen-based vaccine for the treatment of MSI tumors
74 l, phase Ib clinical trial of a personalized neoantigen-based vaccine, NEO-PV-01, in combination with
75 lterations (80%), mutational signatures, and neoantigens between cfDNA and matched tumor biopsies fro
76 sic immunology, rational vaccine design, and neoantigen binding prediction for cancer immunotherapy.
77 eoantigenic peptide sequence and also affect neoantigen binding predictions.
78 alter the peptide sequence and may influence neoantigen binding.
79                                              Neoantigen burden is a major determinant of tumor immuno
80                                Finally, high neoantigen burden was positively associated with genes r
81 associated with increased tumor mutation and neoantigen burden, which in turn were linked with greate
82 troma was observed in tumors with low clonal neoantigen burden.
83 earchers, and clinicians alike, on predicted neoantigen burdens while providing high-level insights i
84  as copy-number drivers and mutation-derived neoantigens, but also yielded novel findings.
85 nalized cancer immunotherapies use predicted neoantigens, but most neoantigen prediction strategies d
86      In conclusion, enhanced immunity due to neoantigens can be one of possible forces to counterbala
87        We hypothesized that vaccination with neoantigens can both expand pre-existing neoantigen-spec
88 ever, to accurately prioritize the potential neoantigen candidates according to their ability of acti
89 chanisms than chromosomal DNA, might produce neoantigens capable of eliciting immune recognition and
90 uch as nanoparticle vaccines customized with neoantigens, cell therapies based on patient-derived den
91 andscape, including immunogenic alterations, neoantigens, common cancer/testis antigens, and the immu
92 CRalphabeta heterodimers specific for clonal neoantigens confirmed correct TCR clonotype assignments
93 ting these strategies to individually tailor neoantigens could facilitate the neoantigen-based transl
94 roaches to identify therapeutically relevant neoantigens couple tumor sequencing with bioinformatic a
95 on pressure, but the extent of the resulting neoantigen depletion remains unclear.
96                                     Apparent neoantigen depletion signals become negligible when taki
97  cellular immunotherapy targeting a "public" neoantigen derived from nucleophosmin 1 (NPM1), which is
98                                 Furthermore, neoantigens derived from indel mutations were nine times
99 ches to cancer have taken advantage of tumor neoantigens derived from somatic mutations.
100                               Genomics-based neoantigen discovery can be enhanced by proteomic eviden
101  the integration of widely adopted tools for neoantigen discovery NeoPredPipe offers a contiguous mea
102 monstrate the application of our gene fusion neoantigen discovery pipeline, called INTEGRATE-Neo, by
103 , we extended this approach for personalized neoantigen discovery.
104 ly infiltrated tumours exhibited a waning of neoantigen editing during tumour evolution, indicative o
105 es shows direct evidence of fs-indel derived neoantigens eliciting immune response, particularly thos
106  dissect the immune response to personalized neoantigens encoded by tumor-specific mutations.
107 l responses against dominant and subdominant neoantigen epitopes derived from mutations, and leads to
108 Vs) encoding putative HLA class I-restricted neoantigen epitopes.
109 ncer by constructing a mathematical model of neoantigen evolution.
110 ent lymphocytes can mount a response against neoantigens expressed in microsatellite-stable gastroint
111                                           In neoantigen-expressing tumors, NK cell stimulation enhanc
112                                 As expected, neoantigen expression during lung adenocarcinoma develop
113                                              Neoantigen expression in OS was lacking and significantl
114                                 By contrast, neoantigen expression in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinom
115 , which demonstrate immunoediting, decreased neoantigen expression, and tumor-specific immune toleran
116 JA to create tumor cell lines with inducible neoantigen expression, which could be used to study anti
117 CR clonotypes were identified despite clonal neoantigen expression.
118  can impact immunosurveillance by modulating neoantigen expression.
119 event leakiness and allow tight control over neoantigen expression.
120 od and tumors was restricted to a few clonal neoantigens featuring an oligo-/monoclonal T cell-recept
121                                           In neoantigen-fixed models, dMLH1 tumors potently induce T
122                  This BNP can capture cancer neoantigens following RT, enhance their uptake in dendri
123 ggesting that they can be used to prioritize neoantigens for individualized neoantigen-specific immun
124 endogenous tumour antigens, such as TAAs and neoantigens, for treating B cell malignancies.
125 requirement for direct, drug-induced stress, neoantigen formation, and stimulation of an innate respo
126 dictions are corroborated by the analysis of neoantigen frequencies and immune escape in exome and RN
127   However computing capabilities to identify neoantigens from genomic sequencing data are a limiting
128 kflow for identifying patient-specific tumor neoantigens from next generation sequencing data.
129 nsitively and accurately predict immunogenic neoantigens from next-generation sequencing data.
130 throughput means of predicting and assessing neoantigens from tumor variants that may stimulate immun
131 of a peptide array representing all possible neoantigen FS peptides.
132                             Targeting cancer neoantigens generated by tumor-exclusive somatic mutatio
133                                    Moreover, neoantigen generation (through posttranslational modific
134 ating fusions and demonstrate that targeting neoantigens has clinical relevance even in low-mutationa
135 indings suggest that MHC class II-restricted neoantigens have a key function in the anti-tumour respo
136 , and autoreactive T cells that target these neoantigens have been identified.
137  the immunopositive and immunonegative MHC-I neoantigens have distinct spatial distribution patterns
138        There is growing evidence that tumour neoantigens have important roles in generating spontaneo
139 ipe is able to rapidly provide insights into neoantigen heterogeneity, burden, and immune stimulation
140                   The focus of indel-derived neoantigen identification has been on leveraging DNA seq
141  applications such as vaccine design, cancer neoantigen identification, development of diagnostics an
142 urrent study provided feasible pipelines for neoantigen identification.
143                   Two different pipelines of neoantigens identification were established in this stud
144                     Importantly, low-fitness neoantigens identified by our method may be leveraged fo
145 dentify CD8+ or CD4+ lymphocytes recognizing neoantigens identified by whole-exome sequencing in 7 pa
146 clones on metastatic progression, suggesting neoantigen immunoediting.
147 tic mutations can result in the formation of neoantigens, immunogenic peptides that are presented on
148 ch may provide key information for inferring neoantigens' immunogenicity.
149  described the H3.3K27M mutation as a shared neoantigen in HLA-A*02.01+, H3.3K27M+ DMGs.
150 ibrary and used NetMHC to predict 149 unique neoantigens in 62% of MPN patients.
151 w negative selection shapes the clonality of neoantigens in a growing cancer by constructing a mathem
152 ure use of adoptive T cell therapy targeting neoantigens in bladder cancer.
153 egies that can be employed to exploit cancer neoantigens in clinical interventions.
154 e existence of circulating T cells targeting neoantigens in GI cancer patients and provide an approac
155                             Here we discover neoantigens in human mantle-cell lymphomas by using an i
156                                    Increased neoantigens in hypermutated cancers with DNA mismatch re
157 ll reactivity to both high-quality and MUC16 neoantigens in long-term survivors of pancreatic cancer,
158                      Inducible expression of neoantigens in mice would enable the study of endogenous
159 pothesis that the large proportion of mutant neoantigens in mismatch repair-deficient cancers make th
160 ive source to identify lymphocytes targeting neoantigens in patients with GI cancer with relatively l
161             Despite the presence of numerous neoantigens in patients, complete tumour elimination is
162 le studies of how T cells respond to defined neoantigens in the context of peripheral tolerance, tran
163 thods considers the original DNA loci of the neoantigens in the perspective of 3D genome which may pr
164 its fitness as a weighted effect of dominant neoantigens in the subclones of the tumour.
165 en qualities defined by a fitness model, and neoantigens in the tumour antigen MUC16 (also known as C
166 immunotherapy, DENDRO delineates the role of neoantigens in treatment response.
167 iew the evidence for the relevance of cancer neoantigens in tumor control and the biological properti
168 ns create highly immunogenic frameshift (FS) neoantigens in tumors.
169                                              Neoantigens induced by random mutations and specific to
170 ic T(H)17 responses are responsible for this neoantigen-induced tumor progression in PDAC.
171 t endogenous CD8 and CD4 T cell responses on neoantigen induction in peripheral tissues.
172 ncer cells via the DNA damage signalling and neoantigen-interferon-gamma pathway under oxidative stre
173 Our data indicate that the CBFB-MYH11 fusion neoantigen is naturally presented on AML blasts and enab
174 ever, timely and efficient identification of neoantigens is still one of the major obstacles to using
175 umoral heterogeneity (ITH) and the resultant neoantigen landscape on T cell immunity are poorly under
176  provided precise loading of diverse peptide neoantigens linked to TLR-7/8a (adjuvant) in nanoparticl
177 c markers (such as tumor mutation burden and neoantigen load) and the degree of CD8(+) T cell infiltr
178 f clonal heterogeneity, total mutation load, neoantigen load, copy number variations (CNV), gene- or
179 lting information can characterize a tumor's neoantigen load, its cadre of infiltrating immune cell t
180 mes of all cancers and therefore have a high neoantigen load.
181                                Subsequently, neoantigen-loaded dendritic cell vaccines and neoantigen
182 ologous recombination deficiency, increasing neoantigen loads (all p < 0.01).
183 expansion of T cell clones in the setting of neoantigen loss.
184 ctor T cell responses directed toward cancer neoantigens mediate tumor regression following checkpoin
185  and the false negative rate (strong-binding neoantigens missed) across peptides of lengths 8-11 were
186 reactive microbial epitopes, consistent with neoantigen molecular mimicry.
187 nation of mice with SNP-7/8a using predicted neoantigens (n = 179) from three tumor models induced CD
188                           Remarkably, iDR-NC/neoantigen nanovaccines elicit 8-fold more frequent neoa
189     Here we develop inversion-induced joined neoantigen (NINJA), using RNA splicing, DNA recombinatio
190               In addition, epitope spread to neoantigens not included in the vaccine was detected pos
191    Cancers accumulate mutations that lead to neoantigens, novel peptides that elicit an immune respon
192                               In tumors with neoantigen or MHC-I loss, T(EX) instead utilize IFNG to
193 l reactivities were directed against mutated neoantigens or a cancer germline antigen, rather than ca
194 gh intratumor heterogeneity (ITH) for cancer neoantigens paradoxically attenuates anti-tumor immune r
195                      (2) An inventory-shared neoantigen peptide library of common solid tumors was co
196 and in 6 of 13 patients who performed shared neoantigen peptide library, respectively.
197 ients' hotspot mutations were matched to the neoantigen peptide library.
198 f-assembling nanoparticle vaccine that links neoantigen peptides to a Toll-like receptor 7/8 agonist
199 for major histocompatibility complex class I neoantigen peptides, the overall false discovery rate (i
200 romising cancer treatment modality; however, neoantigen physicochemical variability can present chall
201 nation against prototypic mutation-generated neoantigens, potentiated the antitumor effect of PD-1 an
202          Finally, we demonstrated that indel neoantigens predicted from RNA-seq were associated with
203  the overall false discovery rate (incorrect neoantigens predicted) and the false negative rate (stro
204                     Here, validated, defined neoantigens, predicted neoepitopes, and mutations of dri
205   Characterizing HLA LOH with LOHHLA refines neoantigen prediction and may have implications for our
206                   Here we offer NeoPredPipe (Neoantigen Prediction Pipeline) as a contiguous means of
207 herapies use predicted neoantigens, but most neoantigen prediction strategies do not consider proxima
208 vides a new perspective toward more accurate neoantigen prediction which eventually contribute to per
209 within tumours, with different mechanisms of neoantigen presentation dysfunction enriched in distinct
210 ational burden (TMB) as surrogate marker for neoantigens presented.
211                               Although a few neoantigen prioritization methods have been proposed to
212               DNN-GFS demonstrated increased neoantigen prioritization power comparing to existing se
213 amed NeoFlow to support proteogenomics-based neoantigen prioritization, enabling more sensitive disco
214 etwork model (DNN-GFS) that is optimized for neoantigen prioritization.
215 ion show high microsatellite instability and neoantigen production.
216 ered that these individuals were enriched in neoantigen qualities defined by a fitness model, and neo
217                   Investigating the specific neoantigen qualities promoting T-cell activation in long
218                    More broadly, we identify neoantigen quality as a biomarker for immunogenic tumour
219  immunogenicity model significantly improves neoantigen ranking.
220                                    Moreover, neoantigen-reactive T cells and a T cell receptor (TCR)
221 eoantigen-loaded dendritic cell vaccines and neoantigen-reactive T cells were generated for personali
222 f cancer, no study to date has shown whether neoantigen-reactive TILs can be found in bladder tumors.
223    Although previous studies have identified neoantigen-reactive TILs from several types of cancer, n
224                   This finding suggests that neoantigen-reactive TILs reside in bladder cancer, which
225                               Most antitumor neoantigen-reactive TILs were found in the differentiate
226  a high-efficiency method for inducing tumor neoantigen release in situ, which has great potential fo
227 ersonalized identification and validation of neoantigens remains a major challenge.
228 3B1-mutated patients may offer an unexplored neoantigen repertoire in MPNs.
229  CD8+ and CD4+ lymphocytes targeting 6 and 4 neoantigens, respectively.
230                                        While neoantigens result from the hypermutable nature of dMMR,
231  "cold" tumors, limited recognition of tumor neoantigens results in the absence of a de novo antitumo
232                      FSPs are tumor-specific neoantigens shared across patients with MSI.
233 "off-the-shelf" cancer vaccine encoding many neoantigens shared across sporadic and hereditary MSI tu
234    Unlike the patient-specific nature of SNV neoantigens, some alternative TSAs may have the advantag
235 D-L2 and that PD-L2 overexpression inhibited neoantigen specific T cell IFN-gamma production.
236 lastoma-generated circulating polyfunctional neoantigen-specific CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cell responses t
237                                      De novo neoantigen-specific CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cell responses w
238                  Although the role of tumour neoantigen-specific CD8(+) T cells in tumour rejection i
239  and dose alter the magnitude and quality of neoantigen-specific CD8(+) T cells.
240 red to increase the breadth and diversity of neoantigen-specific CD8+ T cells.
241 -substituted (AAS) peptides revealed diverse neoantigen-specific CD8+ T responses, each composed of m
242 ic colon cancer patients, we detected CD8(+) neoantigen-specific cells targeting the mutated SMAD5 an
243 and significantly inhibit the progression of neoantigen-specific colorectal tumors.
244 licited up to 47-fold greater frequencies of neoantigen-specific CTLs than soluble vaccines and even
245                    Here we show that durable neoantigen-specific immunity is regulated by mRNA N(6)-m
246 to prioritize neoantigens for individualized neoantigen-specific immunotherapies.
247 enerate enriched populations of personalized neoantigen-specific lymphocytes and isolate TCRs that co
248 tinal (GI) cancers, and adoptive transfer of neoantigen-specific lymphocytes has demonstrated antitum
249                                We found that neoantigen-specific lymphocytes were preferentially enri
250  protocol designed for the detection of rare neoantigen-specific memory T cells in cancer patients fo
251 gen nanovaccines elicit 8-fold more frequent neoantigen-specific peripheral CD8(+) T cells than CpG,
252 ient demonstrated rapid in vivo expansion of neoantigen-specific T cell clones that were reactive to
253 ed oncolytic virus is able to activate tumor neoantigen-specific T cell responses, providing a potent
254  results provide insights into the nature of neoantigen-specific T cells and the effects of checkpoin
255  receptor analysis, we provide evidence that neoantigen-specific T cells from the peripheral blood ca
256 ith neoantigens can both expand pre-existing neoantigen-specific T-cell populations and induce a broa
257 arious tumors of the 4 patients examined, no neoantigen-specific TCR clonotypes were identified despi
258 the cognate neoepitope for a subject-derived neoantigen-specific TCR.
259 ponders retained a pool of CD39(-) stem-like neoantigen-specific TILs that was lacking in ACT nonresp
260  have typically been based upon personalized neoantigen-specific vaccines; however, in this issue of
261 s) permitted functional validation regarding neoantigen specificity.
262 types, while preserving tumor-reactivity and neoantigen-specificity shared with circulating immune ce
263                    Across independent cancer neoantigen studies, peptides with high MARIA scores are
264 s inhibitors, chemoradiation, complexes with neoantigen-targeted monoclonal antibodies, combinations
265 omise, progress and challenges for improving neoantigen-targeted T cell-based immunotherapies for can
266                                              Neoantigen-targeted therapies have typically been based
267                                              Neoantigen-targeting vaccines thus have the potential to
268                         We used personalized neoantigen-targeting vaccines to immunize patients newly
269 ly leukemia specific, making them attractive neoantigen targets for immunotherapy.
270    Rapid identification of immunostimulatory neoantigen targets hastens neoantigen vaccine developmen
271 are presented on AML and that CLAVEEVSL is a neoantigen that can be efficiently targeted on AML by De
272 e fusion and demonstrated that it produces a neoantigen that can specifically elicit a host cytotoxic
273 tions that result in several cancer-specific neoantigens that activate T-cells indicating that they a
274 sed immune system frequently responds to the neoantigens that arise as a consequence of this DNA dama
275 or-expressed 'neoepitopes' actually generate neoantigens that can be functionally recognized and prov
276 us offering a rapid way to screen for cancer neoantigens that can be targeted by subsequent T cell-ba
277 hat gene fusions are a source of immunogenic neoantigens that can mediate responses to immunotherapy.
278  PTEN loss and had reduced expression of two neoantigens that demonstrated strong immunoreactivity wi
279        Tumor-specific mutations can generate neoantigens that drive CD8 T cell responses against canc
280 ions, we also identified gene fusion-derived neoantigens that generate cytotoxic T cell responses.
281  for tumours based on immune interactions of neoantigens that predicts response to immunotherapy.
282                 These mtDNA mutations encode neoantigens that provoke an immune response that is high
283                                   Targeting 'neoantigens'-the somatic mutations expressed only by tum
284                Losing the ability to present neoantigens through human leukocyte antigen (HLA) loss m
285 ssess the ability to form novel antigens, or neoantigens, through haptenation of proteins and can sti
286 not covered by central tolerance, such tumor neoantigens (TNAs) should be under robust immune control
287 geted 58 (60%) and 15 (16%) of the 97 unique neoantigens used across patients, respectively.
288 rategy that uses multi-epitope, personalized neoantigen vaccination, which has previously been tested
289 immunostimulatory neoantigen targets hastens neoantigen vaccine development.
290  of a phase 1B study in which a personalized neoantigen vaccine was combined with programmed death re
291 ncludes immune checkpoint blockade, personal neoantigen vaccines, and adoptive T cell transfer.
292 ive therapeutic strategies, including cancer neoantigen vaccines.
293  showed that the presence of mutant-specific neoantigens was associated with upregulation of antigen
294 ression-associated mutations whose predicted neoantigens were highly correlated with infiltration of
295                                              Neoantigens, which are derived from tumour-specific prot
296 related with activated T-cell recognition of neoantigens, which are tumour-specific, mutated peptides
297 lized vaccines targeting dormancy-associated neoantigens, which can be given to patients with early s
298 these alterations, including the presence of neoantigens, which serve as potential immunotherapeutic
299 r models induced CD8 T cells against ~50% of neoantigens with high predicted MHC-I binding affinity a
300                Major challenges to targeting neoantigens with T cells include heterogeneity and varia

 
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