Product Citations: 3

Checkpoint inhibition (CPI) therapy and adoptive cell therapy with autologous tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL-based ACT) are the two most effective immunotherapies for the treatment of metastatic melanoma. While CPI has been the dominating therapy in the past decade, TIL-based ACT is beneficial for individuals even after progression on previous immunotherapies. Given that notable differences in response have been made when used as a subsequent treatment, we investigated how the qualities of TILs changed when the ex vivo microenvironment of intact tumor fragments were modulated with checkpoint inhibitors targeting programmed death receptor 1 (PD-1) and cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (CTLA-4). Initially, we show that unmodified TILs from CPI-resistant individuals can be produced, are overwhelmingly terminally differentiated, and are capable of responding to tumor. We then investigate these properties in ex vivo checkpoint modulated TILs finding that that they retain these qualities. Lastly, we confirmed the specificity of the TILs to the highest responding tumor antigens, and identified this reactivity resides largely in CD39+CD69+ terminally differentiated populations. Overall, we found that anti-PD-1 will alter the proliferative capacity while anti-CTLA4 will influence breadth of antigen specificity.
Copyright © 2023 Hulen, Friese, Kristensen, Granhøj, Borch, Peeters, Donia, Andersen, Hadrup, Svane and Met.

  • Cancer Research
  • Immunology and Microbiology

Modulation of SRSF2 expression reverses the exhaustion of TILs via the epigenetic regulation of immune checkpoint molecules.

In Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences : CMLS on 1 September 2020 by Wang, Z., Li, K., et al.

The elevated expression of immune checkpoints by the tumor microenvironment is associated with poor prognosis in several cancers due to the exhaustion of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs), and the effective suppression of the expression of these genes is key to reversing the exhaustion of TILs. Herein, we determined that serine/arginine-rich splicing factor 2 (SRSF2) is a target for blocking the tumor microenvironment-associated immunosuppressive effects. We found that the expression of SRSF2 was increased in exhausted T cells and that SRSF2 was involved in multiple immune checkpoint molecules mediating TILs' exhaustion. Furthermore, SRSF2 was revealed to regulate the transcription of these immune checkpoint genes by associating with an acyl-transferases P300/CBP complex and altering the H3K27Ac level near these genes, thereafter influencing the recruitment of signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) to these gene promoters. Collectively, our data indicated that SRSF2 functions as a modulator of the anti-tumor response of T cells and may be a therapeutic target for reversing the exhaustion of TILs.

  • FC/FACS
  • Biochemistry and Molecular biology
  • Genetics
  • Immunology and Microbiology

CD8+ T cells are frontline defenders against cancer and primary targets of current immunotherapies. In CLL, specific functional alterations have been described in circulating CD8+ T cells, yet a global view of the CD8+ T cell compartment phenotype and of its real impact on disease progression is presently elusive. We developed a multidimensional statistical analysis of CD8+ T cell phenotypic marker expression based on whole blood multi-color flow-cytometry. The analysis comprises both unsupervised statistics (hClust and PCA) and supervised classification methods (Random forest, Adaboost algorithm, Decision tree learning and logistic regression) and allows to cluster patients by comparing multiple phenotypic markers expressed by CD8+ T cells. Our results reveal a global CD8+ T cell phenotypic signature in CLL patients that is significantly modified when compared to healthy donors. We also uncover a CD8+ T cell signature characteristic of patients evolving toward therapy within 6 months after phenotyping. The unbiased, not predetermined and multimodal approach highlights a prominent role of the memory compartment in the prognostic signature. The analysis also reveals that imbalance of the central/effector memory compartment in CD8+ T cells can occur irrespectively of the elapsed time after diagnosis. Taken together our results indicate that, in CLL patients, CD8+ T cell phenotype is imprinted by disease clinical progression and reveal that CD8+ T cell memory compartment alteration is not only a hallmark of CLL disease but also a signature of disease evolution toward the need for therapy.

  • Cancer Research
  • Immunology and Microbiology
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