Virchows Archiv (2015): 1-9.
Hauck F, Oliveira-Silva M, Dreyer JH, Ferreira Perrusi VJ, Arcuri RA, Hassan R, Bonvicino CR, Barros MHM, Niedobitek G.
PMID: 25820374 | DOI: 10.1007/s00428-015-1761-4
Rising prevalence rates of high-risk human papillomaviruses (hrHPV) infection in oropharyngeal carcinoma (up to 80 %) have been reported in North America and Scandinavia. We have analysed 424 German and 163 Brazilian head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCC) from the oral cavity (OSCC), oropharynx (OPSCC) and hypopharynx (HPSCC) using p16 immunohistochemistry, HPV DNA PCR and sequencing, hrHPV DNA in situ hybridisation (ISH) and hrHPV E6/E7 RNA ISH. In the German series, 52/424 cases (12.3 %) were p16-positive/hrHPV-positive (OSCC 3.8 % [10/265], OPSCC 34.4 % [42/122], HPSCC 0 % [0/37]). In addition, there were 9 cases that were p16-positive/hrHPV-negative (5 OPSCC and 4 OSCC). In the Brazilian series, the overall hrHPV DNA prevalence by PCR was 11.0 % ([18/163]; OSCC 6 % [5/83], OPSCC 15.5 % [11/71], HPSCC 22.2 % [2/9]). Ten of these cases were hrHPV-positive/p16-positive. The remaining 8 hrHPV-positive/p16-negative cases were also negative in both ISH assays. Furthermore, 5 p16-positive/hrHPV-negative cases (2 OPSCC and 3 OSCC) were identified. In both series, HPV16 was by far the most common HPV type detected. We confirm that regardless of geographical origin, the highest hrHPV prevalence in HNSCC is observed in oropharyngeal carcinomas. The proportion of HPV-associated OPSCC was substantially higher in the German cohort than in the Brazilian series (34.4 vs. 15.5 %), and in both groups, the prevalence of hrHPV in OPSCC was much lower than in recent reports from North America and Scandinavia. We suggest, therefore, that it may be possible to define areas with high (e.g. USA, Canada, Scandinavia), intermediate (e.g. Germany) and low (e.g. Brazil) prevalences of HPV infection in OPSCC.
Lecker, LSM;Berlato, C;Maniati, E;Delaine-Smith, R;Pearce, OMT;Heath, O;Nichols, SJ;Trevisan, C;Novak, M;McDermott, J;Brenton, JD;Cutillas, PR;Rajeeve, V;Hennino, A;Drapkin, R;Loessner, D;Balkwill, FR;
PMID: 34561272 | DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-21-0536
The tumor microenvironment evolves during malignant progression, with major changes in nonmalignant cells, cytokine networks, and the extracellular matrix (ECM). In this study, we aimed to understand how the ECM changes during neoplastic transformation of serous tubal intraepithelial carcinoma lesions (STIC) into high-grade serous ovarian cancers (HGSOC). Analysis of the mechanical properties of human fallopian tubes (FT) and ovaries revealed that normal FT and fimbria had a lower tissue modulus, a measure of stiffness, than normal or diseased ovaries. Proteomic analysis of the matrisome fraction between FT, fimbria, and ovaries showed significant differences in the ECM protein TGF beta induced (TGFBI, also known as βig-h3). STIC lesions in the fimbria expressed high levels of TGFBI, which was predominantly produced by CD163-positive macrophages proximal to STIC epithelial cells. In vitro stimulation of macrophages with TGFβ and IL4 induced secretion of TGFBI, whereas IFNγ/LPS downregulated macrophage TGFBI expression. Immortalized FT secretory epithelial cells carrying clinically relevant TP53 mutations stimulated macrophages to secrete TGFBI and upregulated integrin αvβ3, a putative TGFBI receptor. Transcriptomic HGSOC datasets showed a significant correlation between TGFBI expression and alternatively activated macrophage signatures. Fibroblasts in HGSOC metastases expressed TGFBI and stimulated macrophage TGFBI production in vitro. Treatment of orthotopic mouse HGSOC tumors with an anti-TGFBI antibody reduced peritoneal tumor size, increased tumor monocytes, and activated β3-expressing unconventional T cells. In conclusion, TGFBI may favor an immunosuppressive microenvironment in STICs that persists in advanced HGSOC. Furthermore, TGFBI may be an effector of the tumor-promoting actions of TGFβ and a potential therapeutic target. SIGNIFICANCE: Analysis of ECM changes during neoplastic transformation reveals a role for TGFBI secreted by macrophages in immunosuppression in early ovarian cancer.
Acute Kidney Injury Following Chimeric Antigen Receptor T-Cell Therapy for B-Cell Lymphoma in a Kidney Transplant Recipient
Melilli, E;Mussetti, A;Linares, G;Ruella, M;La Salette, C;Savchenko, A;Taco, M;Montero, N;Grinyo, J;Fava, A;Gomà, M;Meneghini, M;Manonelles, A;Cruzado, J;Sureda, A;Bestard, O;
| DOI: 10.1016/j.xkme.2021.03.011
Anti-CD19 Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy is a newer and effective therapeutic option approved for patients with relapsed/refractory acute lymphoblastic leukemia and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a complication of CAR T-cell therapy which can result in kidney failure. In most cases, it is thought to be related to hemodynamic changes due to cytokine release syndrome. Kidney biopsy in this clinical scenario is usually not performed. Here, we report on a kidney transplant recipient in his 40s who developed a post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder of B-cell origin refractory to conventional treatments and received anti-CD19 CAR T-cell therapy as compassionate treatment. Beginning on day 12 after CAR T-cell infusion, in the absence of clinical symptoms, progressive decline in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) of kidney graft occurred. A subsequent allograft biopsy showed mild tubule-interstitial lymphocyte infiltrates, falling into a Banff borderline-changes category and resembling an acute immuno-allergic tubule-interstitial nephritis. Neither CAR T-cells nor lymphomatous B cells were detected within the graft cellular infiltrates, suggesting an indirect mechanism of kidney injury. Although kidney graft function partially recovered after steroid therapy, post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder progressed and the patient died seven months later.
Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer
Jabado, O;Fan, L;Souza, P;Harris, A;Chaparro, A;Qutaish, M;Si, H;Dannenberg, J;Sasser, K;Couto, S;Fereshteh, M;
| DOI: 10.1136/jitc-2021-sitc2021.928
BackgroundPancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is an aggressive cancer with short overall survival; the standard of care (SoC) is chemotherapy. Immunotherapies in development aim to remodel the stroma by depleting immunosuppressive cell types or using T-cell redirection to kill tumor cells. To date, none of these methods have improved overall survival beyond SoC. Next generation immunotherapies that employ histopathology and molecular subtyping1 for target and patient selection may succeed. Here we leverage a spatial transcriptomics platform (Nanostring Digital Spatial Profiling, DSP) to reveal molecular signaling in tumoral and stromal cells in 57 PDAC patients using tumor microarrays (TMAs). This approach is rapid and clinically relevant as molecular and histology data can be easily bridged.MethodsTMAs generated from surgical resection tissue were commercially sourced. DSP was performed using the CTA RNA panel (1,800 target genes) using PanCK fluorescence for tumor/stroma segmentation. In parallel, slides were chromogenically stained for T-cells (CD3) and macrophages (CD68/CD163). Differential gene expression, gene signature and gene co-expression network analysis was performed using linear models in R.2 3ResultsDifferential gene expression analysis and correlation to IHC confirmed the DSP platform successfully profiled tumor and stromal compartments (figure 1). Immune cell signatures4 and pathway analysis revealed a heterogenous stromal environment. Using a fibroblast gene signature derived from single-cell RNAseq5 we found fibroblast density was positively correlated to PDGFR signaling and MHC-II expression but negatively correlated to B, CD4+ T and neutrophil cell levels (figure 2a). This finding supports the idea that atypical antigen presentation in cancer associated fibroblasts (CAFs) may be exploitable for immunotherapies.6 We constructed a co-expression network from in-situ stromal gene expression and used it to identify receptors coordinately expressed with the immunosuppressive macrophage marker CSF1R as a bispecific antibody partner (figure 2b).7 Classical macrophage markers were identified but also receptors with lesser-known functions in macrophages (TIM3/HAVCR2, FPR3, MS4A6A, LILRB4). Surveying target pairs in this method allows rapid, patient-specific confirmation in serial TMA sections with singleplex IHC or RNAscope.Abstact 928 Figure 1Segmentation strategy and validation of DSP (A) PanCK, CD68 and CD3 staining from two representative tumor cores; (B, C) correlation of gene transcripts in stroma to cell counts from chromogenic staining; (D) heatmap of selected genes differentially expressed in tumor and stroma (n=57 patients).Abstract 928 Figure 2Exploration of the stromal compartment in PDAC TMAs. (A) Heatmap of selected cell type and gene signatures from gene expression in the stroma, color represents single sample enrichment score using GSVA method; (B) a gene co-expression subnetwork in the stroma centered on CSF1R, edge thickness represents strength of correlation, green nodes have evidence for cell surface expression based on proteomic profiling.7ConclusionsIn this study we were able to recapitulate known PDAC biology using very small samples of primary tumors. The combination of TMAs and DSP enables a rapid validation of targets and hypothesis generation for bispecific parings. Further analysis of untreated (n=14) and post-adjuvant chemotherapy (n=26) patients using RNA DSP, IHC and bulk RNAseq is under way. Results from this cohort will enable an integrated histopathology and molecular approach to developing next-generation immunotherapies.ReferencesCollisson EA, Bailey P, Chang DK, Biankin AV. Molecular subtypes of pancreatic cancer. Nat Rev Gastroenterol Hepatol 2019 April;16(4):207-220.Ritchie ME, Phipson B, Wu D, Hu Y, Law CW, Shi W, Smyth GK (2015). “limma powers differential expression analyses for RNA-sequencing and microarray studies.” Nucleic Acids Research 43(7):e47.Hänzelmann S, Castelo R, Guinney J (2013). “GSVA: gene set variation analysis for microarray and RNA-Seq data.” BMC Bioinformatics 14,7.Charoentong P, Finotello F, Angelova M, Mayer C, Efremova M, Rieder D, Hackl H, Trajanoski Z. Pan-cancer immunogenomic analyses reveal genotype-immunophenotype relationships and predictors of response to checkpoint blockade. Cell Rep 2017 January 3;18(1):248-262.Tirosh I, Izar B, Prakadan SM, Wadsworth MH 2nd, Treacy D, Trombetta JJ, Rotem A, Rodman C, Lian C, Murphy G, Fallahi-Sichani M, Dutton-Regester K, Lin JR, Cohen O, Shah P, Lu D, Genshaft AS, Hughes TK, Ziegler CG, Kazer SW, Gaillard A, Kolb KE, Villani AC, Johannessen CM, Andreev AY, Van Allen EM, Bertagnolli M, Sorger PK, Sullivan RJ, Flaherty KT, Frederick DT, Jané-Valbuena J, Yoon CH, Rozenblatt-Rosen O, Shalek AK, Regev A, Garraway LA. Dissecting the multicellular ecosystem of metastatic melanoma by single-cell RNA-seq. Science 2016 April 8;352(6282):189-96.Elyada E, Bolisetty M, Laise P, Flynn WF, Courtois ET, Burkhart RA, Teinor JA, Belleau P, Biffi G, Lucito MS, Sivajothi S, Armstrong TD, Engle DD, Yu KH, Hao Y, Wolfgang CL, Park Y, Preall J, Jaffee EM, Califano A, Robson P, Tuveson DA. Cross-species single-cell analysis of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma reveals antigen-presenting cancer-associated fibroblasts. Cancer Discov 2019 August;9(8):1102-1123. Bausch-Fluck D, Hofmann A, Bock T, Frei AP, Cerciello F, Jacobs A, Moest H, Omasits U, Gundry RL, Yoon C, Schiess R, Schmidt A, Mirkowska P, Härtlová A, Van Eyk JE, Bourquin JP, Aebersold R, Boheler KR, Zandstra P, Wollscheid B. A mass spectrometric-derived cell surface protein atlas. PLoS One 2015 April 20;10(3):e0121314.Ethics ApprovalSpecimens were harvested from unused tissue after a surgical tumor resection procedure. A discrete legal consent form from both hospital and individuals was obtained by the commercial tissue vendor BioMax US for all samples analyzed in this abstract. All human tissues are collected under HIPPA approved protocols.ConsentWritten informed consent was obtained from the patient for publication of this abstract and any accompanying images. A copy of the written consent is available for review by the Editor of this journal.
Rejection of benign melanocytic nevi by nevus-resident CD4+ T cells
Schiferle, EB;Cheon, SY;Ham, S;Son, HG;Messerschmidt, JL;Lawrence, DP;Cohen, JV;Flaherty, KT;Moon, JJ;Lian, CG;Sullivan, RJ;Demehri, S;
PMID: 34162549 | DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abg4498
Melanoma and melanocytic nevi harbor shared lineage-specific antigens and oncogenic mutations. Yet, the relationship between the immune system and melanocytic nevi is unclear. Using a patient-derived xenograft (PDX) model, we found that 81.8% of the transplanted nevi underwent spontaneous regression, while peripheral skin remained intact. Nevus-resident CD4+ T helper 1 cells, which exhibited a massive clonal expansion to melanocyte-specific antigens, were responsible for nevus rejection. Boosting regulatory T cell suppressive function with low-dose exogenous human interleukin-2 injection or treatment with a human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II-blocking antibody prevented nevus rejection. Notably, mice with rejected nevus PDXs were protected from melanoma tumor growth. We detected a parallel CD4+ T cell-dominant immunity in clinically regressing melanocytic nevi. These findings reveal a mechanistic explanation for spontaneous nevus regression in humans and posit the activation of nevus-resident CD4+ effector T cells as a novel strategy for melanoma immunoprevention and treatment.