Primary T Cells from Cutaneous T-cell Lymphoma Skin Explants Display an Exhausted Immune Checkpoint Profile

皮肤 T 细胞淋巴瘤皮肤外植体的原代 T 细胞显示出耗尽的免疫检查点特征

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作者:Christiane Querfeld, Samantha Leung, Patricia L Myskowski, Shane A Curran, Debra A Goldman, Glenn Heller, Xiwei Wu, Sung Hee Kil, Sneh Sharma, Kathleen J Finn, Steven Horwitz, Alison Moskowitz, Babak Mehrara, Steven T Rosen, Allan C Halpern, James W Young0

Abstract

Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL) develops from clonally expanded CD4+ T cells in a background of chronic inflammation. Although dendritic cells (DCs) stimulate T cells and are present in skin, cutaneous T cells in CTCL do not respond with effective antitumor immunity. We evaluated primary T-cell and DC émigrés from epidermal and dermal explant cultures of skin biopsies from CTCL patients (n = 37) and healthy donors (n = 5). Compared with healthy skin, CD4+ CTCL populations contained more T cells expressing PD-1, CTLA-4, and LAG-3. CD8+ CTCL populations contained more T cells expressing CTLA-4 and LAG-3. CTCL populations also contained more T cells expressing the inducible T-cell costimulator (ICOS), a marker of T-cell activation. DC émigrés from healthy or CTCL skin biopsies expressed PD-L1, indicating that maturation during migration resulted in PD-L1 expression irrespective of disease. Most T cells did not express PD-L1. Using skin samples from 49 additional CTCL patients for an unsupervised analysis of genome-wide mRNA expression profiles corroborated that advanced T3/T4-stage samples expressed more checkpoint inhibition mRNA compared with T1/T2 stage patients or healthy controls. Exhaustion of activated T cells is therefore a hallmark of both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells isolated from the lesional skin of patients with CTCL, with increasing expression as the disease progresses. These results justify identification of antigens driving T-cell exhaustion and the evaluation of immune checkpoint inhibition to reverse T-cell exhaustion earlier in the treatment of CTCL. Cancer Immunol Res; 6(8); 900-9. ©2018 AACR.

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