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Dive into the research topics where Martina Fatho is active.

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Featured researches published by Martina Fatho.


Nature | 2012

Melanomas resist T-cell therapy through inflammation-induced reversible dedifferentiation

Jennifer Landsberg; Judith Kohlmeyer; Marcel Renn; Tobias Bald; Meri Rogava; Mira Cron; Martina Fatho; Volker Lennerz; Thomas Wölfel; Michael Hölzel; Thomas Tüting

Adoptive cell transfer therapies (ACTs) with cytotoxic T cells that target melanocytic antigens can achieve remissions in patients with metastatic melanomas, but tumours frequently relapse. Hypotheses explaining the acquired resistance to ACTs include the selection of antigen-deficient tumour cell variants and the induction of T-cell tolerance. However, the lack of appropriate experimental melanoma models has so far impeded clear insights into the underlying mechanisms. Here we establish an effective ACT protocol in a genetically engineered mouse melanoma model that recapitulates tumour regression, remission and relapse as seen in patients. We report the unexpected observation that melanomas acquire ACT resistance through an inflammation-induced reversible loss of melanocytic antigens. In serial transplantation experiments, melanoma cells switch between a differentiated and a dedifferentiated phenotype in response to T-cell-driven inflammatory stimuli. We identified the proinflammatory cytokine tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-α as a crucial factor that directly caused reversible dedifferentiation of mouse and human melanoma cells. Tumour cells exposed to TNF-α were poorly recognized by T cells specific for melanocytic antigens, whereas recognition by T cells specific for non-melanocytic antigens was unaffected or even increased. Our results demonstrate that the phenotypic plasticity of melanoma cells in an inflammatory microenvironment contributes to tumour relapse after initially successful T-cell immunotherapy. On the basis of our work, we propose that future ACT protocols should simultaneously target melanocytic and non-melanocytic antigens to ensure broad recognition of both differentiated and dedifferentiated melanoma cells, and include strategies to sustain T-cell effector functions by blocking immune-inhibitory mechanisms in the tumour microenvironment.


Cancer immunology research | 2015

Exome Sequencing to Predict Neoantigens in Melanoma

Antonia L. Pritchard; Julie G. Burel; Michelle A. Neller; Nicholas K. Hayward; J. Alejandro Lopez; Martina Fatho; Volker Lennerz; Thomas Wölfel; Christopher W. Schmidt

Neoepitopes produced by tumor cells may be key to personalized cancer therapies. Potential MHC-binding peptides were predicted from differential exome sequencing and immunogenic neoepitopes rapidly identified through mixed lymphocyte–tumor cultures, a technique readily applicable to different tumor types. The ability to use circulating peripheral blood cells and matched tumor sequencing data as a basis for neoantigen prediction has exciting possibilities for application in the personalized treatment of cancer patients. We have used a high-throughput screening approach, combining whole-exome sequence data, mRNA microarrays, and publicly available epitope prediction algorithm output to identify mutated proteins processed and displayed by patient tumors and recognized by circulating immune cells. Matched autologous melanoma cell lines and peripheral blood mononuclear cells were used to create mixed lymphocyte tumor cell cultures, resulting in an expansion of tumor-reactive T cells to use for mutated peptide screening. Five patients were investigated, three of whom had a durable complete response (CR; 15+ years) in an autologous melanoma-pulsed dendritic cell clinical trial. We identified seven mutated antigens in total that stimulated T-effector memory cells in two of the five patients. While the procedure did not result in clinically applicable neoantigens for all patients, those identified were likely important in tumor clearance, leading to durable CR. The nature of the screening process allows results to be obtained rapidly and is easily applicable to a wide variety of different tumor types. Cancer Immunol Res; 3(9); 992–8. ©2015 AACR.


Oncotarget | 2017

HLA class I loss in metachronous metastases prevents continuous T cell recognition of mutated neoantigens in a human melanoma model

Barbara Schrörs; Silke Lübcke; Volker Lennerz; Martina Fatho; Anne Bicker; Catherine Wölfel; Patrick Derigs; Thomas Hankeln; Dirk Schadendorf; Annette Paschen; Thomas Wölfel

T lymphocytes against tumor-specific mutated neoantigens can induce tumor regression. Also, the size of the immunogenic cancer mutanome is supposed to correlate with the clinical efficacy of checkpoint inhibition. Herein, we studied the susceptibility of tumor cell lines from lymph node metastases occurring in a melanoma patient over several years towards blood-derived, neoantigen-specific CD8+ T cells. In contrast to a cell line established during early stage III disease, all cell lines generated at later time points from stage IV metastases exhibited partial or complete loss of HLA class I expression. Whole exome and transcriptome sequencing of the four tumor lines and a germline control were applied to identify expressed somatic single nucleotide substitutions (SNS), insertions and deletions (indels). Candidate peptides encoded by these variants and predicted to bind to the patients HLA class I alleles were synthesized and tested for recognition by autologous mixed lymphocyte-tumor cell cultures (MLTCs). Peptides from four mutated proteins, HERPUD1G161S, INSIG1S238F, MMS22LS437F and PRDM10S1050F, were recognized by MLTC responders and MLTC-derived T cell clones restricted by HLA-A*24:02 or HLA-B*15:01. Intracellular peptide processing was verified with transfectants. All four neoantigens could only be targeted on the cell line generated during early stage III disease. HLA loss variants of any kind were uniformly resistant. These findings corroborate that, although neoantigens represent attractive therapeutic targets, they also contribute to the process of cancer immunoediting as a serious limitation to specific T cell immunotherapy.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005

The response of autologous T cells to a human melanoma is dominated by mutated neoantigens

Volker Lennerz; Martina Fatho; Chiara Gentilini; Roy A. Frye; Alexander Lifke; Dorothea Ferel; Catherine Wölfel; Christoph Huber; Thomas Wölfel


Archive | 2006

Melanoma-associated MHC class I associated oligopeptides and the uses thereof

Daniela Eberts; Martina Fatho; Volker Lennerz; Christopher W Schmidt; Pierre van der Prof. Dr. Bruggen; Catherine Wölfel; Thomas Wölfel


Archive | 2013

Novel mhc-independent tumor-associated antigens

Dirk Schadendorf; Annette Paschen; Silke Lübcke; Martina Fatho; Daniela Eberts; Hakim Echchannaoui; Volker Lennerz; Catherine Wölfel; Thomas Wölfel


Archive | 2007

Detection of Individual T-Cell Reaction Patterns Against Tumor-Associated Antigens (TAA) in Tumor Patients as a Basis for the Individual Therapeutic Vaccination of Patients

Martina Fatho; Emmanuelle Wesarg; Volker Lennerz; Pierre van der Prof. Dr. Bruggen; Thomas Wölfel; Serena Debo


Archive | 2018

T cell receptors with MHC independent binding to GM-CSF receptor alpha chain

Dirk Schadendorf; Annette Paschen; Silke Luebcke; Martina Fatho; Daniela Eberts; Hakim Echchannaoui; Volker Lennerz; Catherine Woelfel; Thomas Woelfel


Archive | 2006

Nachweis von individuellen T-Zell-Reaktionsmustern gegen Tumor-assoziierte Antigene (TAA) in Tumorpatienten als Basis für die individuelle therapeutische Vakzinierung von Patienten Detection of individual T cell response patterns against tumor-associated antigens (TAA) in cancer patients as a basis for the individual therapeutic vaccination of patients

Martina Fatho; Volker Lennerz; Serena Schreiber; der Bruggen Pierre Prof. Dr. Van; Emmanuelle Vaniet; Thomas Wölfel


Archive | 2006

Identifying the preferential target antigens of antitumor T cells comprises transfecting autologous dendritic or B cells with a selection of mRNAs coding for tumor-associated antigens

Martina Fatho; Volker Lennerz; Serena Schreiber; der Bruggen Pierre Prof. Dr. Van; Emmanuelle Vaniet; Thomas Wölfel

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Annette Paschen

German Cancer Research Center

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