NRCAM variant defined by microexon skipping is a targetable cell surface proteoform in high-grade gliomas. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • To overcome the paucity of known tumor-specific surface antigens in pediatric high-grade glioma (pHGG), we contrasted splicing patterns in pHGGs and normal brain samples. Among alternative splicing events affecting extracellular protein domains, the most pervasive alteration was the skipping of ≤30-nt-long exons. Several of these skipped microexons mapped to L1-immunoglobulin cell adhesion molecule (IgCAM) family members, such as neuronal CAM (NRCAM). Bulk and single-nuclei short- and long-read RNA-seq revealed uniform skipping of NRCAM microexons 5 and 19 in virtually every pHGG sample. Importantly, the Δex5Δex19 (but not the full-length) NRCAM proteoform was essential for pHGG cell migration and invasion in vitro and tumor growth in vivo. We developed a monoclonal antibody selective for Δex5Δex19 NRCAM and demonstrated that "painting" pHGG cells with this antibody enables killing by T cells armed with an FcRI-based universal immune receptor. Thus, pHGG-specific NRCAM and possibly other L1-IgCAM proteoforms are promising and highly selective targets for adoptive immunotherapies.

publication date

  • August 7, 2025

Identity

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1016/j.celrep.2025.116099

PubMed ID

  • 40782352

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 44

issue

  • 8