Intratumoral antigen signaling traps CD8 <sup>+</sup> T cells to confine exhaustion to the tumor site

Munetomo Takahashi(Tokyo University of Science), Tsz Y. So(University of Cambridge), Vitalina Chamberlain-Evans(University of Cambridge), Robert M. Hughes(University of Cambridge), Juan Carlos Yam‐Puc(University of Cambridge), Katarzyna Kania(University of Cambridge), Michelle Ruhle(University of Cambridge), Tiffeney Mann(University of Cambridge), Martijn J. Schuijs(University of Cambridge), Paul Coupland(University of Cambridge), Dean J. Naisbitt(University of Liverpool), Timotheus Y.F. Halim(University of Cambridge), Paul Lyons(Cambridge School), Píetro Lió(University of Cambridge), Rahul Roychoudhuri(University of Cambridge), Klaus Okkenhaug(University of Cambridge), David J. Adams(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Kenneth G. C. Smith(The University of Melbourne), Duncan I. Jodrell(University of Cambridge), Michael A. Chapman(University of Cambridge), James Thaventhiran(University of Cambridge)
Science Immunology
May 24, 2024
Cited by 22Open Access
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Abstract

Immunotherapy advances have been hindered by difficulties in tracking the behaviors of lymphocytes after antigen signaling. Here, we assessed the behavior of T cells active within tumors through the development of the antigen receptor signaling reporter (AgRSR) mouse, fate-mapping lymphocytes responding to antigens at specific times and locations. Contrary to reports describing the ready egress of T cells out of the tumor, we find that intratumoral antigen signaling traps CD8 + T cells in the tumor. These clonal populations expand and become increasingly exhausted over time. By contrast, antigen-signaled regulatory T cell (T reg ) clonal populations readily recirculate out of the tumor. Consequently, intratumoral antigen signaling acts as a gatekeeper to compartmentalize CD8 + T cell responses, even within the same clonotype, thus enabling exhausted T cells to remain confined to a specific tumor tissue site.


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