USF-LVHN SELECT
Chemical Complementarity of Blood-Sourced, Breast Cancer-Related TCR CDR3s and the CMV UL29 and IE1 Antigens is Associated with Worse Overall Survival.
Publication/Presentation Date
10-2-2024
Abstract
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is common and becomes a particular concern in immunocompromised patients. Understanding the potential role CMV plays in breast cancer patients' disease progression is important for providing more patient-specific treatments. In this study, we analyzed whether a breast cancer patient's blood-sourced T-cell receptor (TCR) complementarity determining-3 (CDR3) amino acid (AA) sequences could provide an indication of the impact of a systemic CMV infection. Specifically, we assessed the chemical complementarity of patient TCR CDR3 AAs and CMV antigens to determine whether patients with greater complementarity also represented different survival probabilities. Initially, we examined five distinct CMV antigens, of which two, IE1 and UL29, represented TCR (TRA+ RB)-CDR3-CMV antigen complementarity scores (CSs) whereby cases representing the upper 50th percentile of CSs had a worse overall survival (log-rank p = 5.034E-3, for IE1). Then, an analysis of CSs representing previously identified, TCR IE1 epitopes indicated that greater TRB CDR3-IE1 epitope complementarities represented a worse OS (log-rank p = 0.0111). These results raise the question of whether a systemic, anti-CMV response leads to increased systemic inflammation, which is either directly or indirectly supportive of tumor growth; or are patients succumbing to a direct impact of CMV functions on tumor growth or metastasis?
ISSN
1573-4927
Published In/Presented At
Neerumalla, P., Jain, R., Aboujaoude, M. T., Hudock, T. R., Song, J. J., Cao, B. H., Chobrutskiy, A., Chobrutskiy, B. I., & Blanck, G. (2024). Chemical Complementarity of Blood-Sourced, Breast Cancer-Related TCR CDR3s and the CMV UL29 and IE1 Antigens is Associated with Worse Overall Survival. Biochemical genetics, 10.1007/s10528-024-10934-y. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10528-024-10934-y
Disciplines
Medical Education | Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
39356353
Department(s)
USF-LVHN SELECT Program, USF-LVHN SELECT Program Students
Document Type
Article