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PD-1 blockade therapy promotes infiltration of tumor-attacking exhausted T cell clonotypes

104

Citations

42

References

2022

Year

Abstract

PD-1 blockade exerts clinical efficacy against various types of cancer by reinvigorating T cells that directly attack tumor cells (tumor-specific T cells) in the tumor microenvironment (TME), and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) also comprise nonspecific bystander T cells. Here, using single-cell sequencing, we show that TILs include skewed T cell clonotypes, which are characterized by exhaustion (T<sub>ex</sub>) or nonexhaustion signatures (T<sub>non-ex</sub>). Among skewed clonotypes, those in the T<sub>ex</sub>, but not those in the T<sub>non-ex</sub>, cluster respond to autologous tumor cell lines. After PD-1 blockade, non-preexisting tumor-specific clonotypes in the T<sub>ex</sub> cluster appear in the TME. Tumor-draining lymph nodes (TDLNs) without metastasis harbor a considerable number of such clonotypes, whereas these clonotypes are rarely detected in peripheral blood. We propose that tumor-infiltrating skewed T cell clonotypes with an exhausted phenotype directly attack tumor cells and that PD-1 blockade can promote infiltration of such T<sub>ex</sub> clonotypes, mainly from TDLNs.

References

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