Preview |
PDF (Original Article)
- Requires a PDF viewer such as GSview, Xpdf or Adobe Acrobat Reader
5MB |
Preview |
PDF (Supplementary Information)
- Requires a PDF viewer such as GSview, Xpdf or Adobe Acrobat Reader
12MB |
Item Type: | Article |
---|---|
Title: | Immune phenotypes and checkpoint molecule expression of clonally expanded lymph node-infiltrating T cells in classical Hodgkin lymphoma |
Creators Name: | Ballhausen, A., Ben Hamza, A., Welters, C., Dietze, K., Bullinger, L., Rahn, H.P., Hartmann, S., Hansmann, M.L. and Hansmann, L. |
Abstract: | Lymph node-infiltrating T cells have been of particular interest in classical Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL). High rates of complete therapeutic responses to antibody-mediated immune checkpoint blockade, even in relapsed/refractory patients, suggest the existence of a T cell-dominated, antigen-experienced, functionally inhibited and lymphoma-directed immune microenvironment. We asked whether clonally expanded T cells (1) were detectable in cHL lymph nodes, (2) showed characteristic immune phenotypes, and (3) were inhibited by immune checkpoint molecule expression. We applied high-dimensional FACS index sorting and single cell T cell receptor αβ sequencing to lymph node-infiltrating T cells from 10 treatment-naïve patients. T cells were predominantly CD4(+) and showed memory differentiation. Expression of classical immune checkpoint molecules (CTLA-4, PD-1, TIM-3) was generally low (< 12.0% of T cells) and not different between CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells. Degrees of clonal T cell expansion varied between patients (range: 1-18 expanded clones per patient) and was almost exclusively restricted to CD8(+) T cells. Clonally expanded T cells showed non-naïve phenotypes and low checkpoint molecule expression similar to non-expanded T cells. Our data suggest that the therapeutic effects of immune checkpoint blockade require mechanisms in addition to dis-inhibition of pre-existing lymphoma-directed T cell responses. Future studies on immune checkpoint blockade-associated effects will identify molecular T cell targets, address dynamic aspects of cell compositions over time, and extend their focus beyond lymph node-infiltrating T cells. |
Keywords: | Hodgkin Lymphoma, Lymph Node-Infiltrating T Cells, Immune Checkpoint Blockade, Lymphoma, Immunology, Single Cell Technologies, T Cell Receptor Sequencing |
Source: | Cancer Immunology Immunotherapy |
ISSN: | 0340-7004 |
Publisher: | Springer |
Volume: | 72 |
Number: | 2 |
Page Range: | 515-521 |
Date: | February 2023 |
Official Publication: | https://doi.org/10.1007/s00262-022-03264-8 |
PubMed: | View item in PubMed |
Repository Staff Only: item control page