scholarly journals Collagen density regulates the activity of tumor-infiltrating T cells

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dorota E Kuczek ◽  
Anne Mette H Larsen ◽  
Marco Carretta ◽  
Adrija Kalvisa ◽  
Majken S Siersbæk ◽  
...  

AbstractBackgroundTumor progression is accompanied by dramatic remodeling of the surrounding extracellular matrix leading to the formation of a tumor-specific ECM, which is often more collagen-rich and of increased stiffness. The altered ECM of the tumor supports cancer growth and metastasis, but it is unknown if this effect involves modulation of T cell activity. To investigate if a high-density tumor-specific ECM could influence the ability of T cells to kill cancer cells, we here studied how T cells respond to 3D culture in different collagen densities.MethodsT cells cultured in 3D conditions surrounded by a high or low collagen density were imaged using confocal fluorescent microscopy. The effects of the different collagen densities on T cell proliferation, survival, and differentiation were examined using flow cytometry. Cancer cell proliferation in similar 3D conditions was also measured. Triple-negative breast cancer specimens were analyzed for the number of infiltrating CD8+ T cells and for the collagen density. Whole-transcriptome analyses were applied to investigate in detail the effects of collagen density on T cells. Computational analyses were used to identify transcription factors involved in the collagen density-induced gene regulation. Observed changes were confirmed by qRT-PCR analysis.ResultsT cell proliferation was significantly reduced in a high-density matrix compared to a low-density matrix and prolonged culture in a high-density matrix led to a higher ratio of CD4+ to CD8+ T cells. The proliferation of cancer cells was unaffected by the surrounding collagen-density. Consistently, we observed a reduction in the number of infiltrating CD8+ T-cells in mammary tumors with high collagen-density indicating that collagen-density has a role in regulating T cell abundance in human breast cancer.Whole-transcriptome analysis of 3D-cultured T cells revealed that a high-density matrix induces downregulation of cytotoxic activity markers and upregulation of regulatory T cell markers. These transcriptional changes were predicted to involve autocrine TGF-B signaling and they were accompanied by an impaired ability of tumor-infiltrating T cells to kill autologous cancer cells.ConclusionsOur study identifies a new immune modulatory mechanism, which could be essential for suppression of T cell activity in the tumor microenvironment.

Author(s):  
Koen A. Marijt ◽  
Lisa Griffioen ◽  
Laura Blijleven ◽  
Sjoerd. H. van der Burg ◽  
Thorbald van Hall

AbstractCancer cells frequently display defects in their antigen-processing pathway and thereby evade CD8 T cell immunity. We described a novel category of cancer antigens, named TEIPP, that emerge on cancers with functional loss of the peptide pump TAP. TEIPPs are non-mutated neoantigens despite their ‘self’ origin by virtue of their absence on normal tissues. Here, we describe the development of a synthetic long peptide (SLP) vaccine for the most immunogenic TEIPP antigen identified thus far, derived from the TAP-independent LRPAP1 signal sequence. LRPAP121–30-specific CD8 T cells were present in blood of all tested healthy donors as well as patients with non-small cell lung adenocarcinoma. SLPs with natural flanking, however, failed to be cross-presented by monocyte-derived dendritic cells. Since the C-terminus of LRPAP121–30 is an unconventional and weakly binding serine (S), we investigated if replacement of this anchor would result in efficient cross-presentation. Exchange into a valine (V) resulted in higher HLA-A2 binding affinity and enhanced T cell stimulation. Importantly, CD8 T cells isolated using the V-variant were able to bind tetramers with the natural S-variant and respond to TAP-deficient cancer cells. A functional screen with an array of N-terminal and C-terminal extended SLPs pointed at the 24-mer V-SLP, elongated at the N-terminus, as most optimal vaccine candidate. This SLP was efficiently cross-presented and consistently induced a strong polyclonal LRPAP121–30-specific CD8 T cells from the endogenous T cell repertoire. Thus, we designed a TEIPP SLP vaccine from the LRPAP1 signal sequence ready for validation in clinical trials.


1993 ◽  
Vol 22 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 80-85
Author(s):  
A. Malley ◽  
N. Pangares ◽  
S.K. Mayo ◽  
M. Zeleny‐Pooley ◽  
J.V. Torres ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 701-710 ◽  
Author(s):  
Isabel María Olazabal ◽  
Noa Beatriz Martín-Cofreces ◽  
María Mittelbrunn ◽  
Gloria Martínez del Hoyo ◽  
Balbino Alarcón ◽  
...  

The array of phagocytic receptors expressed by macrophages make them very efficient at pathogen clearance, and the phagocytic process links innate with adaptive immunity. Primary macrophages modulate antigen cross-presentation and T-cell activation. We assessed ex vivo the putative role of different phagocytic receptors in immune synapse formation with CD8 naïve T-cells from OT-I transgenic mice and compared this with the administration of antigen as a soluble peptide. Macrophages that have phagocytosed antigen induce T-cell microtubule-organizing center and F-actin cytoskeleton relocalization to the contact site, as well as the recruitment of proximal T-cell receptor signals such as activated Vav1 and PKCθ. At the same doses of loaded antigen (1 μM), “phagocytic” macrophages were more efficient than peptide-antigen–loaded macrophages at forming productive immune synapses with T-cells, as indicated by active T-cell TCR/CD3 conformation, LAT phosphorylation, IL-2 production, and T-cell proliferation. Similar T-cell proliferation efficiency was obtained when low doses of soluble peptide (3–30 nM) were loaded on macrophages. These results suggest that the pathway used for antigen uptake may modulate the antigen density presented on MHC-I, resulting in different signals induced in naïve CD8 T-cells, leading either to CD8 T-cell activation or anergy.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 3710-3710
Author(s):  
Ilse Houtenbos ◽  
Saskia J.A.M. Santegoets ◽  
Theresia M. Westers ◽  
Quinten Waisfisz ◽  
Sergey Kipriyanov ◽  
...  

Abstract Dendritic cell (DC)-based immunotherapy faces new challenges since efficacy of DC vaccines in clinical trials has been inconsistent. Strategies to improve immune responses induced by DC are currently being explored. We have recently shown the feasibility of generating fully functional DC from Acute Myeloid Leukemic (AML) blasts, but with varying expression levels of the important costimulatory molecule CD86. To overcome this variability, we developed a novel bispecific diabody (BsDb) simultaneously and agonistically targeting CD40 on AML-DC and CD28 on naïve T cells. Beside optimization of CD28-mediated signaling, the resulting cellular cross-linking was also hypothesized to increase the strength and duration of T cell/AML-DC interactions, thus increasing T cell responsiveness to AML antigens. Indeed the αCD40/αCD28-bispecific diabody provokes increased T cell-DC cluster formation as assessed by light microscopy. Significant increased cluster formation was observed when T cells and AML-DC were cocultured in presence of the BsDb as compared to T cells incubated with a control protein (46%±2 versus 22%±1 respectively, p<0.05). Prior incubation of T cells and/or AML-DC with CD28 or CD40, respectively, completely prevented cluster formation in presence of the BsDb indicating specific binding of the BsDb to CD40 and CD28. The αCD40/αCD28 BsDb significantly increases T cell proliferation induced by AML-DC as compared to the unstimulated cocultures, in a dose dependent manner, as evaluated by mixed lymphocyte reactions (fold increased T cell proliferation of cocultures stimulated with BsDb as compared to unstimulated cocultures:170%±12, p<0.05). In addition, BsDb is capable of DC maturation induction as shown by significant increased mean fluorescence index (MFI) of the maturation markers CD80 (MFI of AML-DC cultured in presence of control protein vs AML-DC cultured in presence of BsDb: 22±5 vs 12±3, p<0.05) and CD83 (4±1 vs 1.5±0.5, p<0.05). In order to determine the effect of aCD40/aCD28-bispecific diabody-mediated cross-linking of AML-derived DC and CD8+ T cells on the induction efficiency of tumor-specific CTL, AML-DC derived from the HLA-A2+ AML cell line MUTZ-3 were pre-incubated with the aCD40/aCD28-bispecific diabody, loaded with the heteroclitic variant of the aa988 epitope of hTERT, and used as stimulator cells in an HLA-A2-matched allogeneic in vitro CTL induction protocol. In total nine parallel bulk cultures, were stimulated twice with peptide-loaded MUTZ-3 DC, either pulsed with control protein or the aCD40/aCD28-bispecific diabody. hTERT988Y-specific CD8+ T cells could be detected in 5/9 individual cultures when stimulated with DC pulsed with the aCD40/aCD28-bispecific diabody, whereas in only 1/9 individual cultures hTERT988Y-specific CD8+ T cells could be detected when stimulated with DC pulsed with the control protein. Thus, priming efficacy of tumor-specific cytotoxic T cells can also be improved by cross-linking AML-DC and T cells with the αCD40/αCD28 diabody. We propose that the αCD40/αCD28-bispecific diabody can serve as a potent therapeutic tool to effectively augment anti-tumor T cell responses elicited by AML-DC.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 2549-2549
Author(s):  
Karnail Singh ◽  
Swetha Srinivasan ◽  
Angela Panoskaltsis-Mortari ◽  
Sharon Sen ◽  
Kelly Hamby ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2549 Introduction: Given the emerging importance of sirolimus as a therapuetic for graft-versus host disease (GvHD), it is critical to rigorously define the mechanisms by which this agent impacts T cell immunity after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Therefore, we have used our novel rhesus macaque model of haploidentical HSCT and GVHD to probe the mechanisms of sirolimus-mediated GvHD prevention when given as a monotherapy. The insights gained from this study will facilitate the rational design of sirolimus-containing combinatorial therapies to maximize immunosuppressive efficacy. Methods: Transplant recipients were prepared with 8Gy total body irradiation and were then infused with MHC-mismatched donor leukopheresis products(n=3, avg. 6.5×108 TNC/kg, 3.4×107 total T cells/kg). Recipients received sirolimus monotherapy (serum troughs 5–15 ng/mL) alone as post-transplant immunosuppresson. Clinical GvHD was monitored according to our standard primate GvHD scoring system and flow cytometric analysis was performed to determine the immune phenotype of sirolimus-treated recipients compared to a cohort of recipients (n= 3) that were given no GvHD immunoprophylaxis. Results: Sirolimus modestly prolonged survival after MHC-mismatched HSCT compared to no immunosuppression (>19 days versus 6.5 days in the untreated cohort, with GvHD confirmed histopathologically at the time of necropsy). We found that sirolimus significantly inhibited lymphocyte proliferation in transplant recipients: The ALC remained suppressed post-transplant (eg ALC of 0.46 × 106/mL on day 15 post-transplant versus 4.3 × 106/mL pre-transplant, with recovery of other leukocytes: WBC=5.1 × 106/mL, ANC=2.6 × 106/mL). These results suggest that sirolimus can have a profound impact on lymphocyte proliferation, inhibiting GvHD-associated lymphocyte expansion by as much as 200–300-fold compared to untreated controls. Sirolimus had a similar impact on CD4+ and CD8+ subpopulation expansion. Thus, while CD4+ T cells and CD8+ T cells expanded by as much as 300-fold and 2000-fold, respectively, without sirolimus, the expansion of these cells was significantly blunted with sirolimus, with maximal expansion of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells being 4- and 3.6-fold, respectively compared to the post-transplant nadir. Sirolimus-treated recipients also better controlled the upregulation of the proliferation marker Ki-67 on CD4+ or CD8+ T cells. Thus, while untreated recipients upregulated Ki-67 expression by as much as 10-fold after engraftment, (with >80-98% T cells expressing high levels of Ki-67 post-transplant versus 5–10% pre-transplant) sirolimus-treated recipients better controlled Ki-67 expression (17-40% Ki-67-high CD4+ and CD8+ T cells post-transplant). While the impact of sirolimus on T cell proliferation was profound, it failed to completely inhibit activation of T cells, as measured by both Granzyme B and CD127 expression. Thus, when effector CD4+ and CD8+ T cell cytotoxic potential was measured by determining expression levels of granzyme B, we found that sirolimus could not downregulate this key component of immune function and GvHD-mediated target organ damage: Granzyme B expression in both CD4+ and CD8+ CD28-/CD95+ effector T cells was unchanged despite sirolimus monotherapy. Down-regulation of CD127 expression, which identifies activated CD8+ T cells in both humans and rhesus macaques, also demonstrated resistance to sirolimus treatment. Thus, while a cohort of recipients that were treated with combined costimulation blockade and sirolimus maintained stable CD127 levels post-transplant, and untreated animals demonstrated total loss of CD127, up to 60% of CD8+ T cells in sirolimus-treated recipients down-regulated CD127, consistent with breakthrough activation of these cells despite mTOR inhibition. Discussion: These results indicate that while the predominant effect of sirolimus during GvHD prophylaxis is its striking ability to inhibit T cell proliferation, sirolimus-based immunosuppression spares some cellular signaling pathways which control T cell activation. These results imply that therapies that are combined with sirolimus during multimodal GvHD prophylaxis should be directed at inhibiting T cell activation rather than proliferation, in order to target non-redundant pathways of alloimmune activation during GvHD control. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e18027-e18027
Author(s):  
Lihua Shi ◽  
Di Zhang ◽  
Susan Tam ◽  
Man-Cheong Fung

e18027 Background: Human papilloma virus (HPV) infection can lead to several types of cancers in both men and women. HPV+ tumor cells constitutively express the HPV-E7 antigen which can act as an oncogene to promote tumor growth and malignant transformation. Here, we report the application of novel Tavo Immune Modulator (TIM) biologics molecules which are consisted of a pMHC complex with an epitope peptide derived from HPV-E7 and co-stimulatory modulators of T cell activity. The HPV-E7 TIM molecules can specifically recognize and activate HPV-E7-specific T cells for the elimination of HPV affected cells. Methods: HPV-E7 TIM molecules were engineered as fusion molecules with HLA-A*02:01 MHC complexed with an HPV-E7 (11-20) epitope peptide at the N-termini, and various T cell costimulatory modulators at the C-termini of IgG heavy and light chains. TIM molecules were expressed in Expi293 cells and purified by Protein A affinity chromatography. Specific binding of TIM with HPV-E7 specific T cells was confirmed by immunostaining and flow cytometry. The activation and expansion of antigen specific CD8+ T cells were elucidated in T cell activation and recall assays. Results: HPV-E7 TIM molecules with various T cell co-stimulator molecules were engineered to specifically recognize HPV-specific T cells. Activation of T cells was antigen-specific and depended on the presence of an engineered T cell modulatory component on the TIM framework. The effects of various costimulatory molecules in different combinations on T cell activation were explored and an optimal combination was identified which facilitated high potency antigen-specific T cell activation. Such molecular combinations could facilitate T cell expansion and activation in T cell recall assays. Efficacy of HPV-E7 TIM molecules by inhibiting tumor growth in a syngeneic tumor model is ongoing. Conclusions: This study demonstrates that HPV-E7 TIM molecules selectively recognize and activate HPV-specific CD8+ T cells in the presence of a combination of two T cell costimulatory factors. Such novel biologics provide distinctive approaches in the treatment of HPV-related cancers and warrant further investigation. Additional in vitro and in vivo studies are ongoing to demonstrate the utility in eliminating HPV-infected tumor cells. Full data will be presented at the meeting.


1990 ◽  
Vol 171 (6) ◽  
pp. 1965-1979 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Suthanthiran

Transmembrane signaling of normal human T cells was explored with mAbs directed at TCR, CD2, CD4, CD5, or CD8 antigens and highly purified CD4+ T cells and CD8+ T cells. Our experiments explicitly show that: (a) crosslinkage of TCR with the CD2 antigen, and not independent crosslinking of TCR and of CD2 antigen or crosslinking of either protein with the CD4 or CD8 antigen induces significant proliferation independent of co-stimulatory signals (e.g., accessory cells, recombinant lymphokines, or tumor promoter), (b) F(ab')2 fragments of mAb directed at the TCR and F(ab')2 anti-CD2, crosslinked with F(ab')2 fragments of rabbit anti-mouse IgG, promote the proliferation of highly purified T cells, (c) a prompt and sustained increase in intracellular free Ca2+ concentration results from crosslinkage of TCR with the CD2 antigen, (d) T cell proliferation induced by this novel approach is curtailed by EGTA and by direct or competitive inhibitors of PKC, (e) crosslinkage of TCR with the CD2 antigen results in the transcriptional activation and translation of the gene for IL-2 and in the expression of IL-2 receptor alpha (CD25), (f) anti-CD25 mAbs inhibit T cell proliferation initiated by crosslinkage of TCR with the CD2 antigen, and recombinant IL-2 restores the proliferative response. Our first demonstration that crosslinkage of TCR with the CD2 antigen induces proliferation of normal human CD4+ T cells and CD8+ T cells, in addition to revealing a novel activation mechanism utilizable by the two major subsets of T cells, suggest that the CD2 antigen might be targeted for the regulation of antigen-specific T cell immunity (e.g., organ transplantation).


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Chen Zou ◽  
Siyuan Wu ◽  
Haigang Wei ◽  
Hailing Luo ◽  
Zhe Tang ◽  
...  

LINC01355 has been demonstrated to be dysregulated in several cancers. However, the exact molecular function of LINC01355 in the pathogenesis of OSCC remains unstudied. Here, we reported the effect of LINC01355 in OSCC and investigated the mechanisms. Firstly, we found that the results indicated LINC01355 was increased in OSCC cells. Knockdown of LINC01355 repressed OSCC cell proliferation, migration, and invasion. Recently, immunotherapy is a significant method for the treatment of cancers, in which CD8+ T cells exhibit a significant role. The influence of LINC01355 on the antitumor activity of CD8+ T cells was also focused in this study. As shown, the silence of LINC01355 could repress OSCC tumor growth via inducing CD8+ T cell immune responses. In addition, we found that downregulation of LINC01355 significantly restrained CD8+ T cell apoptosis, induced CD8+ T cell percentage, and enhanced the cytolysis activity when cocultured with OSCC cells. It has been reported that the Notch pathway represses CD8+ T cell activity in cancer patients. In our present study, we displayed that lack of LINC01355 suppressed OSCC malignant behaviors and enhanced the antitumor activity of CD8+ T cells via inactivating Notch signaling. We showed that decreased LINC01355 significantly restrained the Notch signal via a decrease of Notch-1, JAG-1, and HES-1. Repression of Notch1 reversed the effect of LINC01355 in OSCC cells. In conclusion, it was implied that LINC01355 might induce the development of OSCC via modulating the Notch signal pathway, which could provide a candidate therapeutic target for OSCC.


2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (31) ◽  
pp. e2010053118
Author(s):  
Alessandro Poli ◽  
Shidqiyyah Abdul-Hamid ◽  
Antonio Enrico Zaurito ◽  
Francesca Campagnoli ◽  
Valeria Bevilacqua ◽  
...  

Regulatory T cells (Tregs) play fundamental roles in maintaining peripheral tolerance to prevent autoimmunity and limit legitimate immune responses, a feature hijacked in tumor microenvironments in which the recruitment of Tregs often extinguishes immune surveillance through suppression of T-effector cell signaling and tumor cell killing. The pharmacological tuning of Treg activity without impacting on T conventional (Tconv) cell activity would likely be beneficial in the treatment of various human pathologies. PIP4K2A, 2B, and 2C constitute a family of lipid kinases that phosphorylate PtdIns5P to PtdIns(4,5)P2. They are involved in stress signaling, act as synthetic lethal targets in p53-null tumors, and in mice, the loss of PIP4K2C leads to late onset hyperinflammation. Accordingly, a human single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) near the PIP4K2C gene is linked with susceptibility to autoimmune diseases. How PIP4Ks impact on human T cell signaling is not known. Using ex vivo human primary T cells, we found that PIP4K activity is required for Treg cell signaling and immunosuppressive activity. Genetic and pharmacological inhibition of PIP4K in Tregs reduces signaling through the PI3K, mTORC1/S6, and MAPK pathways, impairs cell proliferation, and increases activation-induced cell death while sparing Tconv. PIP4K and PI3K signaling regulate the expression of the Treg master transcriptional activator FOXP3 and the epigenetic signaling protein Ubiquitin-like containing PHD and RING finger domains 1 (UHRF1). Our studies suggest that the pharmacological inhibition of PIP4K can reprogram human Treg identity while leaving Tconv cell signaling and T-helper differentiation to largely intact potentially enhancing overall immunological activity.


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