Most high-grade serous ovarian cancers (OC) do not respond to current immunotherapies. To identify potential new actionable tumor antigens in OC, we performed immunopeptidomics on a human OC cell line expressing the HLA-A02:01 haplotype, which is commonly expressed across many racial and ethnic groups. From this dataset, we identified TTLL8, POTEE, and PKMYT1 peptides as candidate tumor antigens with low expression in normal tissues and upregulated expression in OC. Using tissue microarrays, we assessed the protein expression of TTLL8 and POTEE and their association with patient outcomes in a large cohort of OC patients. TTLL8 was found to be expressed in 56.7% of OC and was associated with a worse overall prognosis. POTEE was expressed in 97.2% of OC patients and had no significant association with survival. In patient TILs, increases in cytokine production and tetramer-positive populations identified antigen-specific CD8 T cell responses, which were dependent on antigen presentation by HLA class I. Antigen-specific T cells triggered cancer cell killing of antigen-pulsed OC cells. These findings suggest that TTLL8, POTEE, and PKMYT1 are potential targets for the development of antigen-targeted immunotherapy in OC.
<b><i>Background:</i></b> The Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway has been noted to be upregulated in head and neck cancers, including oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). This study compared the efficacy of β-catenin immunohistochemistry (IHC), p16 IHC and automated human papillomavirus (HPV) in situ hybridization (ISH) in OSCC. <b><i>Methods:</i></b> Sixty-eight OSCCs (48 surgical specimens and 20 fine-needle aspirations) were evaluated. Nuclear staining only of β-catenin was assessed as 0-3+ intensity (relative to controls of benign squamous mucosa). p16 was interpreted as positive if 70% of tumor cells showed brown nuclear and cytoplasmic staining. HPV ISH was interpreted as positive if a minimum of one tumor cell showed brown punctate dot-like nuclear positivity. p16 IHC and HPV ISH were then correlated with β-catenin staining. HPV ISH was used as the gold standard. <b><i>Results:</i></b> Twenty-five of 48 surgical specimens (52.1%) and 11 of 20 cell blocks (55%) stained positively for β-catenin, making a total of 36 of 68 (52.9%) staining positively for β-catenin, as compared to 61.7% positive for p16 IHC and 70.6% positive by automated HPV ISH, the gold standard method for OSCC diagnosis. χ<sup>2</sup> analysis revealed no significant correlation between β-catenin and HPV ISH (p > 0.05) and demonstrated a strong correlation between p16 and HPV ISH (p < 0.05). <b><i>Conclusion:</i></b> β-Catenin IHC is not a sensitive or specific marker of HPV and is unlikely to be a useful adjunct to p16 IHC or HPV ISH in the setting of advanced OSCC. However, as this study focused on samples of advanced OSCC, β-catenin IHC may still find some use in the diagnosis of early-stage OSCC.
SOX10 is a transcription factor expressed from the developmental stage to adulthood in acinar and intercalated ducts of major salivary glands, and in some salivary gland tumors. Its role in cytologic specimens has been rarely documented. This study was performed to evaluate its utility in the diagnosis of salivary gland oncocytic tumors on fine …