Immune checkpoints are predominantly co-expressed by clonally expanded CD4+FoxP3+ intratumoral T-cells in primary human cancers
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Published:2023-12-06
Issue:1
Volume:42
Page:
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ISSN:1756-9966
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Container-title:Journal of Experimental & Clinical Cancer Research
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language:en
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Short-container-title:J Exp Clin Cancer Res
Author:
Bredel Delphine, Tihic Edi, Mouraud Séverine, Danlos François-Xavier, Susini Sandrine, Aglave Marine, Alfaro Alexia, Mohamed-Djalim Chifaou, Rouanne Mathieu, Halse Héloise, Bigorgne Amélie, Tselikas Lambros, Dalle Stéphane, Hartl Dana M., Baudin Eric, Guettier Catherine, Vibert Eric, Rosmorduc Olivier, Robert Caroline, Ferlicot Sophie, Parier Bastien, Albiges Laurence, de Montpreville Vincent Thomas, Besse Benjamin, Mercier Olaf, Even Caroline, Breuskin Ingrid, Classe Marion, Radulescu Camélia, Lebret Thierry, Pautier Patricia, Gouy Sébastien, Scoazec Jean-Yves, Zitvogel Laurence, Marabelle AurélienORCID, Bonvalet Mélodie
Abstract
Abstract
Background
In addition to anti-PD(L)1, anti-CTLA-4 and anti-LAG-3, novel immune checkpoint proteins (ICP)-targeted antibodies have recently failed to demonstrate significant efficacy in clinical trials. In these trials, patients were enrolled without screening for drug target expression. Although these novel ICP-targeted antibodies were expected to stimulate anti-tumor CD8 + T-cells, the rationale for their target expression in human tumors relied on pre-clinical IHC stainings and transcriptomic data, which are poorly sensitive and specific techniques for assessing membrane protein expression on immune cell subsets. Our aim was to describe ICP expression on intratumoral T-cells from primary solid tumors to better design upcoming neoadjuvant cancer immunotherapy trials.
Methods
We prospectively performed multiparameter flow cytometry and single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-Seq) paired with TCR sequencing on freshly resected human primary tumors of various histological types to precisely determine ICP expression levels within T-cell subsets.
Results
Within a given tumor type, we found high inter-individual variability for tumor infiltrating CD45 + cells and for T-cells subsets. The proportions of CD8+ T-cells (~ 40%), CD4+ FoxP3- T-cells (~ 40%) and CD4+ FoxP3+ T-cells (~ 10%) were consistent across patients and indications. Intriguingly, both stimulatory (CD25, CD28, 4-1BB, ICOS, OX40) and inhibitory (PD-1, CTLA-4, PD-L1, CD39 and TIGIT) checkpoint proteins were predominantly co-expressed by intratumoral CD4+FoxP3+ T-cells. ScRNA-Seq paired with TCR sequencing revealed that T-cells with high clonality and high ICP expressions comprised over 80% of FoxP3+ cells among CD4+ T-cells. Unsupervised clustering of flow cytometry and scRNAseq data identified subsets of CD8+ T-cells and of CD4+ FoxP3- T-cells expressing certain checkpoints, though these expressions were generally lower than in CD4+ FoxP3+ T-cell subsets, both in terms of proportions among total T-cells and ICP expression levels.
Conclusions
Tumor histology alone does not reveal the complete picture of the tumor immune contexture. In clinical trials, assumptions regarding target expression should rely on more sensitive and specific techniques than conventional IHC or transcriptomics. Flow cytometry and scRNAseq accurately characterize ICP expression within immune cell subsets. Much like in hematology, flow cytometry can better describe the immune contexture of solid tumors, offering the opportunity to guide patient treatment according to drug target expression rather than tumor histological type.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cancer Research,Oncology
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