Tang N, Cheng C, Zhang X, Qiao M, Li N, Mu W, Wei XF, Han W, Wang H
PMID: 31999649 | DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.133977
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In recent years, chimeric antigen receptor-modified T cell (CAR T cell) therapy has proven to be a promising approach against cancer. Nonetheless, this approach still faces multiple challenges in eliminating solid tumors, one of which being the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME). Here, we demonstrated that knocking out the endogenous TGF-? receptor II (TGFBR2) in CAR T cells with CRISPR/Cas9 technology could reduce the induced Treg conversion and prevent the exhaustion of CAR T ce lls. Meanwhile, TGFBR2-edited CAR T cells had better in vivo tumor elimination efficacy, both in cell line-derived xenograft and patient-derived xenograft solid tumor models, whether administered locally or systemically. In addition, the TGFBR2-edited CAR T cells could eliminate contralaterally reinoculated xenografts in mice effectively, with an increased proportion of memory subsets within circulating CAR T cells of central memory and effector memory subsets. In conclusion, we greatly improved the in vitro and in vivo function of CAR T cells in TGF-?-rich tumor environments by knocking out endogenous TGFBR2 and propose a potentially new method to improve the efficacy of CAR T cell therapy for treating solid tumors
Cancer immunology research
Reschke, R;Shapiro, JW;Yu, J;Rouhani, SJ;Olson, DJ;Zha, Y;Gajewski, TF;
PMID: 35977003 | DOI: 10.1158/2326-6066.CIR-22-0362
Immune checkpoint blockade is therapeutically successful for many patients across multiple cancer types. However, immune-related adverse events (irAE) frequently occur and can sometimes be life threatening. It is critical to understand the immunologic mechanisms of irAEs with the goal of finding novel treatment targets. Herein, we report our analysis of tissues from patients with irAE dermatitis using multiparameter immunofluorescence (IF), spatial transcriptomics, and RNA in situ hybridization (RISH). Skin psoriasis cases were studied as a comparison, as a known Th17-driven disease, and colitis was investigated as a comparison. IF analysis revealed that CD4+ and CD8+ tissue-resident memory T (TRM) cells were preferentially expanded in the inflamed portion of skin in cutaneous irAEs compared with healthy skin controls. Spatial transcriptomics allowed us to focus on areas containing TRM cells to discern functional phenotype and revealed expression of Th1-associated genes in irAEs, compared with Th17-asociated genes in psoriasis. Expression of PD-1, CTLA-4, LAG-3, and other inhibitory receptors was observed in irAE cases. RISH technology combined with IF confirmed expression of IFNγ, CXCL9, CXCL10, and TNFα in irAE dermatitis, as well as IFNγ within TRM cells specifically. The Th1-skewed phenotype was confirmed in irAE colitis cases compared with healthy colon.
Ramberg, I;Vieira, FG;Toft, PB;von Buchwald, C;Heegaard, S;
PMID: 35626161 | DOI: 10.3390/cancers14102558
The pathogenesis of squamous cell neoplasms arising in the lacrimal drainage system is poorly understood, and the underlying genomic drivers for disease development remain unexplored. We aimed to investigate the genomic aberrations in carcinomas arising in the LDS and correlate the findings to human papillomavirus (HPV) status. The HPV analysis was performed using HPV DNA PCR, HPV E6/E7 mRNA in-situ hybridization, and p16 immunohistochemistry. The genomic characterization was performed by targeted DNA sequencing of 523 cancer-relevant genes. Patients with LDS papilloma (n = 17) and LDS carcinoma (n = 15) were included. There was a male predominance (68%) and a median age at diagnosis of 46.0 years (range 27.5-65.5 years) in patients with papilloma and 63.8 years (range 34.0-87.2 years) in patients with carcinoma. Transcriptional activity of the HPV E6/E7 oncogenes was detected in the whole tumor thickness in 12/15 (80%) papillomas (HPV6, 11, 16) and 10/15 (67%) squamous cell carcinomas (SCC) (HPV11: 3/15 (20%) and HPV16: 7/15 (47%)). Pathogenic variants in PIK3CA, FGFR3, AKT1, and PIK3R1, wildtype TP53, p16 overexpression, and deregulated high-risk E6/E7 transcription characterized the HPV16-positive SCC. The deregulated pattern of HPV E6/E7 expression, correlating with HPV DNA presence and p16 positivity, supports a causal role of HPV in a subset of LDS papillomas and carcinomas. The viral and molecular profile of LDS SCC resembles that of other HPV-driven SCC.
Strasser K, Birnleitner H, Beer A, Pils D, Gerner MC, Schmetterer KG, Bachleitner-Hofmann T, Stift A, Bergmann M, Oehler R.
PMID: - | DOI: 10.1080/2162402X.2018.1537693
T cells in colorectal cancer (CRC) are associated with improved survival. However, checkpoint immunotherapies antagonizing the suppression of these cells are ineffective in the great majority of patients. To better understand the immune cell regulation in CRC, we compared tumor-associated T lymphocytes and macrophages to the immune cell infiltrate of normal mucosa. Human colorectal tumor specimen and tumor-distant normal mucosa tissues of the same patients were collected. Phenotypes and functionality of tissue-derived T cells and macrophages were characterized using immunohistochemistry, RNA in situ hybridization, and multiparameter flow cytometry. CRC contained significantly higher numbers of potentially immunosuppressive CD39 and Helios-expressing regulatory T cells in comparison to normal mucosa. Surprisingly, we found a concomitant increase of pro-inflammatory IFNγ -producing T cells. PD-L1+ stromal cells were decreased in the tumor tissue. Macrophages in the tumor compared to tumor-distant normal tissue appear to have an altered phenotype, identified by HLA-DR, CD14, CX3CR1, and CD64, and tolerogenic CD206+macrophages are quantitatively reduced. The prognostic effect of these observed differences between distant mucosa and tumor tissue on the overall survival was examined using gene expression data of 298 CRC patients. The combined gene expression of increased FOXP3, IFNγ, CD14, and decreased CD206 correlated with a poor prognosis in CRC patients. These data reveal that the CRC microenvironment promotes the coexistence of seemingly antagonistic suppressive and pro-inflammatory immune responses and might provide an explanation why a blockade of the PD1/PD-L1 axis is ineffective in CRC. This should be taken into account when designing novel treatment strategies.
Boxberg M, Leising L, Steiger K, Jesinghaus M, Alkhamas A, Mielke M, Pfarr N, Götz C, Wolff KD, Weichert W, Kolk A.
PMID: 30530592 | DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1800242
Immunotherapy shows promising results and revolutionizes treatment of oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). The immunologic microenvironment might have prognostic/predictive implications. Morphologic immunologic parameters (inflammatory infiltrate, stromal content, and budding activity [BA] [potentially indicating epithelial–mesenchymal transition]) were evaluated in 66 human primary therapy-naive OSCCs. Intraepithelial/stromal tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs; CD3+/CD4+/CD8+/CD4+FOXP3+/IL-17A+) were quantified, and ratios were calculated. HLA class I in tumor cells was evaluated immunohistochemically. mRNA in situ hybridization to detect IFN-γ was performed. Analysis was performed within invasive front (IF) and tumor center (TCe). Decreased HLA expression was associated with low TIL density, pronounced stromal content, and high BA; IFN-γ in TILs was correlated with high-density TILs; and IFN-γ in tumor cells was correlated with absence of BA (p < 0.05). Heterogeneity of parameters (TCe/IF) was rare. Low density of stromal CD4+FOXP3+ TILs within TCe and IF was identified as an independent prognostic factor for poor overall, disease-specific, and disease-free survival (p ≤ 0.011). Refining prognostication in OSCC with high-density CD4+FOXP3+ infiltrate within TCe and/or IF, high FOXP3:CD4 ratio was significantly correlated with favorable outcome in this subgroup. Furthermore, high-stromal CD8:CD4 ratio was found to be an independent favorable prognostic factor. In summary, immunologic parameters were closely intertwined. Morphologic correlates of epithelial–mesenchymal transition were associated with downregulation of HLA and decreased inflammation. Heterogeneity was infrequent. Low-density stromal CD4+FOXP3+ infiltrate within TCe and IF was an independent poor prognostic factor. Stratification of cases with high-density CD4+FOXP3+ TILs by FOXP3:CD4 ratio enables refinement of prognostication of this subgroup. CD8:CD4 ratio was identified as an independent prognostic factor.
Sasaki, K;Hayamizu, Y;Murakami, R;Toi, M;Iwai, K;
PMID: 37060248 | DOI: 10.1002/1873-3468.14623
Tumor-elicited inflammation confers tumorigenic properties, including cell death resistance, proliferation, or immune evasion. To focus on inflammatory signaling in tumors, we investigated linear ubiquitination, which enhances the nuclear factor-κB signaling pathway and prevents extrinsic programmed cell death under inflammatory environments. Here, we showed that linear ubiquitination was augmented especially in tumor cells around a necrotic core. Linear ubiquitination allowed melanomas to tolerate the hostile tumor microenvironment and to extend a necrosis-containing morphology. Loss of linear ubiquitination resulted in few necrotic lesions and growth regression, further leading to repression of innate anti-PD-1 therapy resistance signatures in melanoma as well as activation of interferon responses and antigen presentation that promote immune-mediated tumor eradication. Collectively, linear ubiquitination promotes tumor-specific tissue remodeling and the ensuing immune evasion.
Abstract LB235: Characterizing tumor-infiltrated immune cells with spatial context using an integrated RNAscope-immunohistochemistry co-detection workflow in FFPE tissues
Dikshit, A;Phatak, J;Hernandez, L;Doolittle, E;Murlidhar, V;Zhang, B;Ma, X;
| DOI: 10.1158/1538-7445.am2021-lb235
Complex tissues such as tumors are comprised of multiple cells types and extracellular matrix. These cells include heterogenous populations of immune cells that infiltrate the tumors. Understanding the composition of these immune infiltrates in the tumor microenvironment (TME) can provide key insights to guide therapeutic intervention and predict treatment response. Thorough understanding of complex tissue dynamics and immune cell characterization requires a multi-omics approach. Simultaneous detection of RNA and protein using in situ hybridization (ISH) and immunohistochemistry/immunofluorescence (IHC/IF) can reveal cellular sources of secreted proteins, identify specific cell types, and visualize the spatial organization of cells within the tissue. However, a sequential workflow of ISH followed by IHC/IF frequently yields suboptimal protein detection because the protease digestion step in the ISH protocol resulting in poor antibody signal. Here we demonstrate a newly developed integrated ISH/IHC workflow that can substantially improve RNA-protein co-detection, enabling the visualization and characterization of tumor immune infiltrates at single-cell resolution with spatial and morphological context. To characterize tumor-infiltrating immune cells in a tumor TMA (tumor microarray), we utilized the RNAscope Multiplex Fluorescence assay in combination with the RNA-Protein Co-detection Kit to detect multiple immune cell populations. Immune cells such as macrophages, T cells and NK cells were detected using specific antibodies against CD68, CD8, CD4 and CD56, respectively. Precise characterization of these immune cells was achieved by using probes against targets such as CCL5, IFNG, GNZB, IL-12, NCR1 etc. that not only help in identifying specific immune cells but also assist in determining their activation states. We identified subsets of T cells such as CD4+ regulatory T cells and CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes. Additionally, we were able to determine the activation states of CD8+ T cells by visualizing the expression of IFNG and GZMB. Furthermore, infiltrating macrophages were identified by detecting the CD68 protein expression while the M1 and M2 subsets were differentiated by detecting the M2-specific target RNA for CD163. Similarly, NK cells were identified by detecting CD56 protein in combination with CCL5 and NCR1 RNA expression. Interestingly, the degree of infiltration of the different immune cell populations varied based on the tumor type. In conclusion, the new RNAscope-ISH-IHC co-detection workflow and reagents enable optimized simultaneous visualization of RNA and protein targets by enhancing the compatibility of antibodies - including many previously incompatible antibodies - with RNAscope. This new workflow provides a powerful new approach to identifying and characterizing tumor infiltrating populations of immune cells.
Host IL11 Signaling Suppresses CD4+ T cell-Mediated Antitumor Responses to Colon Cancer in Mice
Cancer immunology research
Huynh, J;Baloyan, D;Chisanga, D;Shi, W;O'Brien, M;Afshar-Sterle, S;Alorro, M;Pang, L;Williams, DS;Parslow, AC;Thilakasiri, P;Eissmann, MF;Boon, L;Masson, F;Chand, AL;Ernst, M;
PMID: 33906864 | DOI: 10.1158/2326-6066.CIR-19-1023
IL11 is a member of the IL6 family of cytokines and signals through its cognate receptor subunits, IL11RA and glycoprotein 130 (GP130), to elicit biological responses via the JAK/STAT signaling pathway. IL11 contributes to cancer progression by promoting the survival and proliferation of cancer cells, but the potential immunomodulatory properties of IL11 signaling during tumor development have thus far remained unexplored. Here, we have characterized a role for IL11 in regulating CD4+ T cell-mediated antitumor responses. Absence of IL11 signaling impaired tumor growth in a sporadic mouse model of colon cancer and syngeneic allograft models of colon cancer. Adoptive bone marrow transfer experiments and in vivo depletion studies demonstrated that the tumor-promoting activity of IL11 was mediated through its suppressive effect on host CD4+ T cells in the tumor microenvironment. Indeed, when compared with Il11ra-proficient CD4+ T cells associated with MC38 tumors, their Il11ra-deficient counterparts displayed elevated expression of mRNA encoding the antitumor mediators IFNγ and TNFα. Likewise, IL11 potently suppressed the production of proinflammatory cytokines (IFNγ, TNFα, IL6, and IL12p70) by CD4+ T cells in vitro, which we corroborated by RNAscope analysis of human colorectal cancers, where IL11RAhigh tumors showed less IFNG and CD4 expression than IL11RAlow tumors. Therefore, our results ascribe a tumor cell-extrinsic immunomodulatory role to IL11 during colon cancer development that could be amenable to an anticytokine-based therapy.See related commentary by van der Burg.
Subbiah V, Murthy R, Hong DS, Prins RM, Hosing C, Hendricks K, Kolli D, Noffsinger L, Brown R, McGuire M, Fu S, Piha-Paul S, Naing A, Conley AP, Benjamin RS, Kaur I, Bosch ML.
PMID: 30018119 | DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-17-2707
Abstract
Purpose: Dendritic cells (DC) initiate adaptive immune responses through the uptake and presentation of antigenic material. In preclinical studies, intratumorally injected activated DCs (aDCs; DCVax-Direct) were superior to immature DCs in rejecting tumors from mice.Experimental Design: This single-arm, open-label phase I clinical trial evaluated the safety and efficacy of aDCs, administered intratumorally, in patients with solid tumors. Three dose levels (2 million, 6 million, and 15 million aDCs per injection) were tested using a standard 3 + 3 dose-escalation trial design. Feasibility, immunogenicity, changes to the tumor microenvironment after direct injection, and survival were evaluated. We also investigated cytokine production of aDCs prior to injection.Results: In total, 39 of the 40 enrolled patients were evaluable. The injections of aDCs were well tolerated with no dose-limiting toxicities. Increased lymphocyte infiltration was observed in 54% of assessed patients. Stable disease (SD; best response) at week 8 was associated with increased overall survival. Increased secretion of interleukin (IL)-8 and IL12p40 by aDCs was significantly associated with survival (P = 0.023 and 0.024, respectively). Increased TNFα levels correlated positively with SD at week 8 (P < 0.01).Conclusions: Intratumoral aDC injections were feasible and safe. Increased production of specific cytokines was correlated with SD and prolonged survival, demonstrating a link between the functional profile of aDCs prior to injection and patient outcomes.
Zhang, X;Zhang, C;Qiao, M;Cheng, C;Tang, N;Lu, S;Sun, W;Xu, B;Cao, Y;Wei, X;Wang, Y;Han, W;Wang, H;
PMID: 36240777 | DOI: 10.1016/j.ccell.2022.09.013
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy has limited efficacy against solid tumors, and one major challenge is T cell exhaustion. To address this challenge, we performed a candidate gene screen using a hypofunction CAR-T cell model and found that depletion of basic leucine zipper ATF-like transcription factor (BATF) improved the antitumor performance of CAR-T cells. In different types of CAR-T cells and mouse OT-1 cells, loss of BATF endows T cells with improved resistance to exhaustion and superior tumor eradication efficacy. Mechanistically, we found that BATF binds to and up-regulates a subset of exhaustion-related genes in human CAR-T cells. BATF regulates the expression of genes involved in development of effector and memory T cells, and knocking out BATF shifts the population toward a more central memory subset. We demonstrate that BATF is a key factor limiting CAR-T cell function and that its depletion enhances the antitumor activity of CAR-T cells against solid tumors.
The American journal of surgical pathology
Hopkins, MR;Palsgrove, DN;Ronnett, BM;Vang, R;Lin, J;Murdock, TA;
PMID: 36069815 | DOI: 10.1097/PAS.0000000000001970
Human papillomavirus (HPV)-independent primary endometrial squamous cell carcinoma (PESCC) is a rare but aggressive subtype of endometrial carcinoma for which little is known about the genomic characteristics. Traditional criteria have restricted the diagnosis of PESCC to cases without any cervical involvement. However, given that modern ancillary techniques can detect HPV and characteristic genetic alterations that should identify the more common mimics in the differential diagnosis, including endometrial endometrioid carcinoma with extensive squamous differentiation and HPV-associated primary cervical squamous cell carcinoma, those criteria may benefit from revision. To further characterize PESCC, we identified 5 cases of pure squamous cell carcinoma dominantly involving the endometrium that had the potential to be PESCC: 1 case involving only the endometrium and 4 cases with some involvement of the cervix. Clinicopathologic features were assessed and immunohistochemical analysis (p16, estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, and p53), HPV RNA in situ hybridization (high-risk and low-risk cocktails and targeted probes for 16 and 18), and molecular studies were performed. All tumors showed aberrant/mutation-type p53 expression, were negative for estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, and p16, and had no detectable HPV. Per whole-exome sequencing, 4 of the 5 tumors demonstrated comutations in TP53 and CDKN2A (p16). Four patients died of disease within 20 months (range, 1 to 20 mo; mean, 9 mo), and 1 patient had no evidence of disease at 38 months. PESCC represents a unique, clinically aggressive subtype of endometrial cancer with TP53 and CDKN2A comutations. This characteristic profile, which is similar to HPV-independent squamous cell carcinoma of the vulva, is distinct from endometrioid carcinoma with extensive squamous differentiation and HPV-associated primary cervical squamous cell carcinoma and can be used to distinguish PESCC from those mimics even when cervical involvement is present. Diagnostic criteria for PESCC should be relaxed to allow for cervical involvement when other pathologic features are consistent with, and ancillary techniques are supportive of classification as such.
Spatially organized multicellular immune hubs in human colorectal cancer
Pelka, K;Hofree, M;Chen, JH;Sarkizova, S;Pirl, JD;Jorgji, V;Bejnood, A;Dionne, D;Ge, WH;Xu, KH;Chao, SX;Zollinger, DR;Lieb, DJ;Reeves, JW;Fuhrman, CA;Hoang, ML;Delorey, T;Nguyen, LT;Waldman, J;Klapholz, M;Wakiro, I;Cohen, O;Albers, J;Smillie, CS;Cuoco, MS;Wu, J;Su, MJ;Yeung, J;Vijaykumar, B;Magnuson, AM;Asinovski, N;Moll, T;Goder-Reiser, MN;Applebaum, AS;Brais, LK;DelloStritto, LK;Denning, SL;Phillips, ST;Hill, EK;Meehan, JK;Frederick, DT;Sharova, T;Kanodia, A;Todres, EZ;Jané-Valbuena, J;Biton, M;Izar, B;Lambden, CD;Clancy, TE;Bleday, R;Melnitchouk, N;Irani, J;Kunitake, H;Berger, DL;Srivastava, A;Hornick, JL;Ogino, S;Rotem, A;Vigneau, S;Johnson, BE;Corcoran, RB;Sharpe, AH;Kuchroo, VK;Ng, K;Giannakis, M;Nieman, LT;Boland, GM;Aguirre, AJ;Anderson, AC;Rozenblatt-Rosen, O;Regev, A;Hacohen, N;
PMID: 34450029 | DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2021.08.003
Immune responses to cancer are highly variable, with mismatch repair-deficient (MMRd) tumors exhibiting more anti-tumor immunity than mismatch repair-proficient (MMRp) tumors. To understand the rules governing these varied responses, we transcriptionally profiled 371,223 cells from colorectal tumors and adjacent normal tissues of 28 MMRp and 34 MMRd individuals. Analysis of 88 cell subsets and their 204 associated gene expression programs revealed extensive transcriptional and spatial remodeling across tumors. To discover hubs of interacting malignant and immune cells, we identified expression programs in different cell types that co-varied across tumors from affected individuals and used spatial profiling to localize coordinated programs. We discovered a myeloid cell-attracting hub at the tumor-luminal interface associated with tissue damage and an MMRd-enriched immune hub within the tumor, with activated T cells together with malignant and myeloid cells expressing T cell-attracting chemokines. By identifying interacting cellular programs, we reveal the logic underlying spatially organized immune-malignant cell networks.