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Lung tumor-infiltrating T<sub>reg</sub> have divergent transcriptional profiles and function linked to checkpoint blockade response.


ABSTRACT: Regulatory T cells (Treg) are conventionally viewed as suppressors of endogenous and therapy-induced antitumor immunity; however, their role in modulating responses to immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) is unclear. In this study, we integrated single-cell RNA-seq/T cell receptor sequencing (TCRseq) of >73,000 tumor-infiltrating Treg (TIL-Treg) from anti-PD-1-treated and treatment-naive non-small cell lung cancers (NSCLC) with single-cell analysis of tumor-associated antigen (TAA)-specific Treg derived from a murine tumor model. We identified 10 subsets of human TIL-Treg, most of which have high concordance with murine TIL-Treg subsets. Only one subset selectively expresses high levels of TNFRSF4 (OX40) and TNFRSF18 (GITR), whose engangement by cognate ligand mediated proliferative programs and NF-κB activation, as well as multiple genes involved in Treg suppression, including LAG3. Functionally, the OX40hiGITRhi subset is the most highly suppressive ex vivo, and its higher representation among total TIL-Treg correlated with resistance to PD-1 blockade. Unexpectedly, in the murine tumor model, we found that virtually all TIL-Treg-expressing T cell receptors that are specific for TAA fully develop a distinct TH1-like signature over a 2-week period after entry into the tumor, down-regulating FoxP3 and up-regulating expression of TBX21 (Tbet), IFNG, and certain proinflammatory granzymes. Transfer learning of a gene score from the murine TAA-specific TH1-like Treg subset to the human single-cell dataset revealed a highly analogous subcluster that was enriched in anti-PD-1-responding tumors. These findings demonstrate that TIL-Treg partition into multiple distinct transcriptionally defined subsets with potentially opposing effects on ICB-induced antitumor immunity and suggest that TAA-specific TIL-Treg may positively contribute to antitumor responses.

SUBMITTER: Dykema AG 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10629528 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Lung tumor-infiltrating T&lt;sub&gt;reg&lt;/sub&gt; have divergent transcriptional profiles and function linked to checkpoint blockade response.

Dykema Arbor G AG   Zhang Jiajia J   Cheung Laurene S LS   Connor Sydney S   Zhang Boyang B   Zeng Zhen Z   Cherry Christopher M CM   Li Taibo T   Caushi Justina X JX   Nishimoto Marni M   Munoz Andrew J AJ   Ji Zhicheng Z   Hou Wenpin W   Zhan Wentao W   Singh Dipika D   Zhang Tianbei T   Rashid Rufiaat R   Mitchell-Flack Marisa M   Bom Sadhana S   Tam Ada A   Ionta Nick N   Aye Thet H K THK   Wang Yi Y   Sawosik Camille A CA   Tirado Lauren E LE   Tomasovic Luke M LM   VanDyke Derek D   Spangler Jamie B JB   Anagnostou Valsamo V   Yang Stephen S   Spicer Jonathan J   Rayes Roni R   Taube Janis J   Brahmer Julie R JR   Forde Patrick M PM   Yegnasubramanian Srinivasan S   Ji Hongkai H   Pardoll Drew M DM   Smith Kellie N KN  

Science immunology 20230915 87


Regulatory T cells (T<sub>reg</sub>) are conventionally viewed as suppressors of endogenous and therapy-induced antitumor immunity; however, their role in modulating responses to immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) is unclear. In this study, we integrated single-cell RNA-seq/T cell receptor sequencing (TCRseq) of >73,000 tumor-infiltrating T<sub>reg</sub> (TIL-T<sub>reg</sub>) from anti-PD-1-treated and treatment-naive non-small cell lung cancers (NSCLC) with single-cell analysis of tumor-associate  ...[more]

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