Shared PRAME epitopes are T-cell targets in NUT carcinoma.

Jensen, J. L., Peterson, S. K., Sambade, M. J., Alley, J. R., Yu, S., Kinjo, T., Bennett, S. N., Vensko, S. P., Shabrang, M., Debetta, J. D., Geyer, J. K., Price, B. A., Nickel, K. P., Kimple, R. J., Kotecha, R. S., Herring, L. E., Davis, I. J., Wang, J. R., French, C. A., … Vincent, B. G. (2026). Shared PRAME epitopes are T-cell targets in NUT carcinoma.. Journal for Immunotherapy of Cancer, 14(2).

Abstract

BACKGROUND: NUT carcinoma is a rare but highly lethal solid tumor without an effective standard of care. NUT carcinoma is caused by bromodomain-containing NUTM1 fusion oncogenes, most commonly BRD4::NUTM1. BRD4::NUTM1 recruits p300 to acetylate H3K27 forming expansive stretches of hyperacetylated chromatin called "megadomains" with the overexpression of corresponding oncogenes, including MYC. We hypothesized that transcriptional dysregulation caused by BRD4::NUTM1 would lead to the generation of cancer-specific antigens that could be therapeutically actionable.

METHODS: We integrated genomics, computational antigen prediction software, targeted immunopeptidomics using single-labeled and double-labeled peptide standards, and gain/loss-of-function genetic experiments on a panel of cell lines (N=5), a patient-derived xenograft, a tissue microarray (N=77), and patient samples from the Tempus AI Sequencing Database harboring evidence of NUTM1 fusions (N=165). We created an αPRAME425 T-cell receptor (TCR) × SP34 αCD3 bispecific molecule modeled after brenetafusp, an αPRAME425 TCR bispecific T-cell engager, as well as αPRAME425 TCR T-cells based on anzutresgene autoleucel and we applied these products to NUT carcinoma cells in vitro.

RESULTS: We identified PRAME as the most commonly expressed cancer/testis antigen in patient samples harboring the three canonical NUT carcinoma fusions (BRD4::NUTM1, BRD3::NUTM1, and NSD3::NUTM1). Additionally, 56% (43/77) of NUT carcinoma tissue microarray samples stained positive for PRAME. BRD4::NUTM1 expression in HEK 293T cells enhanced PRAME levels and BRD4::NUTM1 knockout in NUT carcinoma cells reduced PRAME levels. Immunopeptidomics detected more PRAME-derived human leukocyte antigen (HLA) ligands (N=9) than all other cancer/testis antigens combined (N=5). Targeted mass spectrometry detected the HLA-A*02:01/SLLQHLIGL (PRAME425) epitope in 100% (4/4) of HLA-A*02+, PRAME+ NUT carcinoma samples at higher levels (>0.01 fM) than HLA-A*02:01/RLDQLLRHV (PRAME312) or HLA-A*02:01/YLHARLREL (PRAME462). The αPRAME425 TCR × SP34 αCD3 bispecific molecule and αPRAME425 TCR T-cells each exhibited potent, T-cell mediated cytotoxicity against PRAME+ NUT carcinoma cells.

CONCLUSIONS: PRAME is highly and frequently expressed in NUT carcinoma, and the most common oncoprotein causing NUT carcinoma, BRD4::NUTM1, contributes to these high PRAME levels. PRAME epitopes presented by HLA class I are a previously unrecognized therapeutic vulnerability for NUT carcinoma that warrants clinical trials testing PRAME-targeted immunotherapies in this neglected patient population.

Last updated on 04/02/2026
PubMed