scholarly journals Matched T cell repertoire analysis of peripheral blood and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) in early stage breast cancer (ESBC) patients (pts) treated with pre-operative cryoablation (cryo) and/or Ipilimumab (Ipi)

2014 ◽  
Vol 2 (S3) ◽  
Author(s):  
David B Page ◽  
Heather McArthur ◽  
Zhiwan Dong ◽  
Phillip Wong ◽  
Ryan Emerson ◽  
...  
2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
John F. Beausang ◽  
Amanda J. Wheeler ◽  
Natalie H. Chan ◽  
Violet R. Hanft ◽  
Frederick M. Dirbas ◽  
...  

Tumor infiltrating T-cells play an important role in many cancers, and can improve prognosis and yield therapeutic targets. We characterized T-cells infiltrating both breast cancer tumors and the surrounding normal breast tissue to identify T-cells specific to each, as well as their abundance in peripheral blood. Using immune profiling of the T-cell beta chain repertoire in 16 patients with early stage breast cancer, we show that the clonal structure of the tumor is significantly different from adjacent breast tissue, with the tumor containing approximately 3-fold more T-cells, but with a lower fraction of unique sequences and higher clonality compared to normal breast. The clonal structure of T-cells in blood and normal breast is more similar than between blood and tumor and can be used to distinguish tumor from normal breast tissue in 14 of 16 patients. Many T-cells overlap between tissues from the same patient, including approximately 50% of T-cells between tumor and normal breast. Both solid tissues contain high-abundance "enriched" sequences that are absent or of low abundance in the other tissue. Many of these T-cells are either not detected or detected with very low frequency in the blood, suggesting the existence of separate compartments of T-cells in both tumor and normal breast. Enriched T-cell sequences are typically unique to each patient, but there is a subset of sequences that are shared between many different patients. We show that most of these are commonly generated sequences and thus unlikely to play an important role in the tumor microenvironment.


1998 ◽  
Vol 16 ◽  
pp. S171
Author(s):  
Ph. Bahadoran ◽  
F. Le Deist ◽  
F. Rieux-Laucat ◽  
N. de Saint-Sauveur ◽  
N. Brousse ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 113 (29) ◽  
pp. 8272-8277 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel J. Munson ◽  
Colt A. Egelston ◽  
Kami E. Chiotti ◽  
Zuly E. Parra ◽  
Tullia C. Bruno ◽  
...  

Infiltration of T cells in breast tumors correlates with improved survival of patients with breast cancer, despite relatively few mutations in these tumors. To determine if T-cell specificity can be harnessed to augment immunotherapies of breast cancer, we sought to identify the alpha–beta paired T-cell receptors (TCRs) of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes shared between multiple patients. Because TCRs function as heterodimeric proteins, we used an emulsion-based RT-PCR assay to link and amplify TCR pairs. Using this assay on engineered T-cell hybridomas, we observed ∼85% accurate pairing fidelity, although TCR recovery frequency varied. When we applied this technique to patient samples, we found that for any given TCR pair, the dominant alpha- or beta-binding partner comprised ∼90% of the total binding partners. Analysis of TCR sequences from primary tumors showed about fourfold more overlap in tumor-involved relative to tumor-free sentinel lymph nodes. Additionally, comparison of sequences from both tumors of a patient with bilateral breast cancer showed 10% overlap. Finally, we identified a panel of unique TCRs shared between patients’ tumors and peripheral blood that were not found in the peripheral blood of controls. These TCRs encoded a range of V, J, and complementarity determining region 3 (CDR3) sequences on the alpha-chain, and displayed restricted V-beta use. The nucleotides encoding these shared TCR CDR3s varied, suggesting immune selection of this response. Harnessing these T cells may provide practical strategies to improve the shared antigen-specific response to breast cancer.


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