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

Arbor G. Dykema(Bloomberg (United States)), Jiajia Zhang(Bloomberg (United States)), Laurene S. Cheung(Bloomberg (United States)), Sydney Connor(Bloomberg (United States)), Boyang Zhang(Johns Hopkins University), Zhen Zeng(Bloomberg (United States)), Christopher Cherry, Taibo Li(Johns Hopkins University), Justina X. Caushi(Bloomberg (United States)), Marni Nishimoto(Bloomberg (United States)), Andrew J. Munoz(Bloomberg (United States)), Zhicheng Ji(Duke University), Wenpin Hou(Johns Hopkins University), W. S. Zhan(Johns Hopkins University), Dipika Singh(Bloomberg (United States)), Tianbei Zhang(Bloomberg (United States)), Rufiaat Rashid(Bloomberg (United States)), Marisa Mitchell-Flack(Bloomberg (United States)), Sadhana Bom(Bloomberg (United States)), Ada Tam(Bloomberg (United States)), Nick Ionta(Bloomberg (United States)), Thet H. K. Aye(Bloomberg (United States)), Yi Wang(Johns Hopkins University), Camille A. Sawosik(Bloomberg (United States)), Lauren E. Tirado(Bloomberg (United States)), Luke M. Tomasovic(Bloomberg (United States)), Derek VanDyke(Johns Hopkins University), Jamie B. Spangler(Bloomberg (United States)), Valsamo Anagnostou(Bloomberg (United States)), Stephen C. Yang(Johns Hopkins University), Jonathan Spicer(McGill University), Roni Rayes(McGill University), Janis M. Taube(Bloomberg (United States)), Julie R. Brahmer(Bloomberg (United States)), Patrick M. Forde(Bloomberg (United States)), Srinivasan Yegnasubramanian(Bloomberg (United States)), Hongkai Ji(Johns Hopkins University), Drew M. Pardoll(Bloomberg (United States)), Kellie N. Smith(Bloomberg (United States))
Science Immunology
September 15, 2023
Cited by 71Open Access
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Abstract

Regulatory T cells (T reg ) 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 &gt;73,000 tumor-infiltrating T reg (TIL-T reg ) from anti–PD-1–treated and treatment-naive non–small cell lung cancers (NSCLC) with single-cell analysis of tumor-associated antigen (TAA)–specific T reg derived from a murine tumor model. We identified 10 subsets of human TIL-T reg , most of which have high concordance with murine TIL-T reg 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 T reg suppression, including LAG3 . Functionally, the OX40 hi GITR hi subset is the most highly suppressive ex vivo, and its higher representation among total TIL-T reg correlated with resistance to PD-1 blockade. Unexpectedly, in the murine tumor model, we found that virtually all TIL-T reg –expressing T cell receptors that are specific for TAA fully develop a distinct T H 1-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 T H 1-like T reg 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-T reg partition into multiple distinct transcriptionally defined subsets with potentially opposing effects on ICB-induced antitumor immunity and suggest that TAA-specific TIL-T reg may positively contribute to antitumor responses.


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