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1.
iScience ; 27(2): 108880, 2024 Feb 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38333710

RESUMO

Local cryoablation can engender systemic immune activation/anticancer responses in tumors otherwise resistant to immune checkpoint blockade (ICB). We evaluated the safety/tolerability of preoperative cryoablation plus ipilimumab and nivolumab in 5 early-stage/resectable breast cancers. The primary endpoint was met when all 5 patients underwent standard-of-care primary breast surgery undelayedly. Three patients developed transient hyperthyroidism; one developed grade 4 liver toxicity (resolved with supportive management). We compared this strategy with cryoablation and/or ipilimumab. Dual ICB plus cryoablation induced higher expression of T cell activation markers and serum Th1 cytokines and reduced immunosuppressive serum CD4+PD-1hi T cells, improving effector-to-suppressor T cell ratio. After dual ICB and before cryoablation, T cell receptor sequencing of 4 patients showed increased T cell clonality. In this small subset of patients, we provide preliminary evidence that preoperative cryoablation plus ipilimumab and nivolumab is feasible, inducing systemic adaptive immune activation potentially more robust than cryoablation with/without ipilimumab.

2.
Sci Transl Med ; 15(706): eabq0476, 2023 07 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37494469

RESUMO

T cells are the central drivers of many inflammatory diseases, but the repertoire of tissue-resident T cells at sites of pathology in human organs remains poorly understood. We examined the site-specificity of T cell receptor (TCR) repertoires across tissues (5 to 18 tissues per patient) in prospectively collected autopsies of patients with and without graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), a potentially lethal tissue-targeting complication of allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation, and in mouse models of GVHD. Anatomic similarity between tissues was a key determinant of TCR repertoire composition within patients, independent of disease or transplant status. The T cells recovered from peripheral blood and spleens in patients and mice captured a limited portion of the TCR repertoire detected in tissues. Whereas few T cell clones were shared across patients, motif-based clustering revealed shared repertoire signatures across patients in a tissue-specific fashion. T cells at disease sites had a tissue-resident phenotype and were of donor origin based on single-cell chimerism analysis. These data demonstrate the complex composition of T cell populations that persist in human tissues at the end stage of an inflammatory disorder after lymphocyte-directed therapy. These findings also underscore the importance of studying T cell in tissues rather than blood for tissue-based pathologies and suggest the tissue-specific nature of both the endogenous and posttransplant T cell landscape.


Assuntos
Doença Enxerto-Hospedeiro , Transplante de Células-Tronco Hematopoéticas , Humanos , Camundongos , Animais , Linfócitos T/patologia , Doença Enxerto-Hospedeiro/patologia , Receptores de Antígenos de Linfócitos T
3.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 2184, 2023 04 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37069150

RESUMO

Ageing is associated with changes in the cellular composition of the immune system. During ageing, hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) that produce immune cells are thought to decline in their regenerative capacity. However, HSPC function has been mostly assessed using transplantation assays, and it remains unclear how HSPCs age in the native bone marrow niche. To address this issue, we present an in situ single cell lineage tracing technology to quantify the clonal composition and cell production of single cells in their native niche. Our results demonstrate that a pool of HSPCs with unequal output maintains myelopoiesis through overlapping waves of cell production throughout adult life. During ageing, the increased frequency of myeloid cells is explained by greater numbers of HSPCs contributing to myelopoiesis rather than the increased myeloid output of individual HSPCs. Strikingly, the myeloid output of HSPCs remains constant over time despite accumulating significant transcriptomic changes throughout adulthood. Together, these results show that, unlike emergency myelopoiesis post-transplantation, aged HSPCs in their native microenvironment do not functionally decline in their regenerative capacity.


Assuntos
Células-Tronco Hematopoéticas , Mielopoese , Adulto , Humanos , Idoso , Mielopoese/genética , Medula Óssea , Células da Medula Óssea , Células Mieloides
4.
medRxiv ; 2023 Dec 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38234840

RESUMO

Glioblastoma (GBM) is a primary brain cancer with an abysmal prognosis and few effective therapies. The ability to investigate the tumor microenvironment before and during treatment would greatly enhance both understanding of disease response and progression, as well as the delivery and impact of therapeutics. Stereotactic biopsies are a routine surgical procedure performed primarily for diagnostic histopathologic purposes. The role of investigative biopsies - tissue sampling for the purpose of understanding tumor microenvironmental responses to treatment using integrated multi-modal molecular analyses ('Multi-omics") has yet to be defined. Secondly, it is unknown whether comparatively small tissue samples from brain biopsies can yield sufficient information with such methods. Here we adapt stereotactic needle core biopsy tissue in two separate patients. In the first patient with recurrent GBM we performed highly resolved multi-omics analysis methods including single cell RNA sequencing, spatial-transcriptomics, metabolomics, proteomics, phosphoproteomics, T-cell clonotype analysis, and MHC Class I immunopeptidomics from biopsy tissue that was obtained from a single procedure. In a second patient we analyzed multi-regional core biopsies to decipher spatial and genomic variance. We also investigated the utility of stereotactic biopsies as a method for generating patient derived xenograft models in a separate patient cohort. Dataset integration across modalities showed good correspondence between spatial modalities, highlighted immune cell associated metabolic pathways and revealed poor correlation between RNA expression and the tumor MHC Class I immunopeptidome. In conclusion, stereotactic needle biopsy cores are of sufficient quality to generate multi-omics data, provide data rich insight into a patient's disease process and tumor immune microenvironment and can be of value in evaluating treatment responses. One sentence summary: Integrative multi-omics analysis of stereotactic needle core biopsies in glioblastoma.

5.
Cancer Cell ; 40(7): 738-753.e5, 2022 07 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35679859

RESUMO

How immune dysregulation affects recovery from COVID-19 infection in patients with cancer remains unclear. We analyzed cellular and humoral immune responses in 103 patients with prior COVID-19 infection, more than 20% of whom had delayed viral clearance. Delayed clearance was associated with loss of antibodies to nucleocapsid and spike proteins with a compensatory increase in functional T cell responses. High-dimensional analysis of peripheral blood samples demonstrated increased CD8+ effector T cell differentiation and a broad but poorly converged COVID-specific T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire in patients with prolonged disease. Conversely, patients with a CD4+ dominant immunophenotype had a lower incidence of prolonged disease and exhibited a deep and highly select COVID-associated TCR repertoire, consistent with effective viral clearance and development of T cell memory. These results highlight the importance of B cells and CD4+ T cells in promoting durable SARS-CoV-2 clearance and the significance of coordinated cellular and humoral immunity for long-term disease control.


Assuntos
COVID-19 , Linfócitos T CD4-Positivos , Linfócitos T CD8-Positivos , Humanos , Imunidade Celular , Imunidade Humoral , Memória Imunológica , Receptores de Antígenos de Linfócitos T , SARS-CoV-2
6.
Nature ; 606(7913): 389-395, 2022 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35589842

RESUMO

Cancer immunoediting1 is a hallmark of cancer2 that predicts that lymphocytes kill more immunogenic cancer cells to cause less immunogenic clones to dominate a population. Although proven in mice1,3, whether immunoediting occurs naturally in human cancers remains unclear. Here, to address this, we investigate how 70 human pancreatic cancers evolved over 10 years. We find that, despite having more time to accumulate mutations, rare long-term survivors of pancreatic cancer who have stronger T cell activity in primary tumours develop genetically less heterogeneous recurrent tumours with fewer immunogenic mutations (neoantigens). To quantify whether immunoediting underlies these observations, we infer that a neoantigen is immunogenic (high-quality) by two features-'non-selfness'  based on neoantigen similarity to known antigens4,5, and 'selfness'  based on the antigenic distance required for a neoantigen to differentially bind to the MHC or activate a T cell compared with its wild-type peptide. Using these features, we estimate cancer clone fitness as the aggregate cost of T cells recognizing high-quality neoantigens offset by gains from oncogenic mutations. With this model, we predict the clonal evolution of tumours to reveal that long-term survivors of pancreatic cancer develop recurrent tumours with fewer high-quality neoantigens. Thus, we submit evidence that that the human immune system naturally edits neoantigens. Furthermore, we present a model to predict how immune pressure induces cancer cell populations to evolve over time. More broadly, our results argue that the immune system fundamentally surveils host genetic changes to suppress cancer.


Assuntos
Antígenos de Neoplasias , Sobreviventes de Câncer , Neoplasias Pancreáticas , Antígenos de Neoplasias/genética , Antígenos de Neoplasias/imunologia , Humanos , Neoplasias Pancreáticas/genética , Neoplasias Pancreáticas/imunologia , Neoplasias Pancreáticas/patologia , Linfócitos T/imunologia , Evasão Tumoral/imunologia
7.
Blood Adv ; 6(5): 1547-1558, 2022 03 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35100339

RESUMO

Posttransplant vaccination targeting residual disease is an immunotherapeutic strategy to improve antigen-specific immune responses and prolong disease-free survival after autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) for multiple myeloma (MM). We conducted a phase 1 vaccine trial to determine the safety, toxicity, and immunogenicity of autologous Langerhans-type dendritic cells (LCs) electroporated with CT7, MAGE-A3, and Wilms tumor 1 (WT1) messenger RNA (mRNA), after ASCT for MM. Ten patients received a priming immunization plus 2 boosters at 12, 30, and 90 days, respectively, after ASCT. Vaccines contained 9 × 106 mRNA-electroporated LCs. Ten additional patients did not receive LC vaccines but otherwise underwent identical ASCT and supportive care. At 3 months after ASCT, all patients started lenalidomide maintenance therapy. Vaccinated patients developed mild local delayed-type hypersensitivity reactions after booster vaccines, but no toxicities exceeded grade 1. At 1 and 3 months after vaccines, antigen-specific CD4 and CD8 T cells increased secretion of proinflammatory cytokines (interferon-γ, interleukin-2, and tumor necrosis factor-α) above prevaccine levels, and also upregulated the cytotoxicity marker CD107a. CD4 and CD8 T-cell repertoire analysis showed a trend for increased clonal expansion in the vaccine cohort, which was more pronounced in the CD4 compartment. Although not powered to assess clinical efficacy, treatment responses favored the vaccine arm. Triple antigen-bearing mRNA-electroporated autologous LC vaccination initiated at engraftment after ASCT, in conjunction with standard lenalidomide maintenance therapy for MM, is safe and induces antigen-specific immune reactivity. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01995708.


Assuntos
Vacinas Anticâncer , Transplante de Células-Tronco Hematopoéticas , Mieloma Múltiplo , Antígenos de Neoplasias , Autoenxertos , Vacinas Anticâncer/efeitos adversos , Células Dendríticas , Humanos , Lenalidomida , RNA Mensageiro/genética , Transplante Autólogo
8.
Cell ; 184(15): 4032-4047.e31, 2021 07 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34171309

RESUMO

Although mutations in DNA are the best-studied source of neoantigens that determine response to immune checkpoint blockade, alterations in RNA splicing within cancer cells could similarly result in neoepitope production. However, the endogenous antigenicity and clinical potential of such splicing-derived epitopes have not been tested. Here, we demonstrate that pharmacologic modulation of splicing via specific drug classes generates bona fide neoantigens and elicits anti-tumor immunity, augmenting checkpoint immunotherapy. Splicing modulation inhibited tumor growth and enhanced checkpoint blockade in a manner dependent on host T cells and peptides presented on tumor MHC class I. Splicing modulation induced stereotyped splicing changes across tumor types, altering the MHC I-bound immunopeptidome to yield splicing-derived neoepitopes that trigger an anti-tumor T cell response in vivo. These data definitively identify splicing modulation as an untapped source of immunogenic peptides and provide a means to enhance response to checkpoint blockade that is readily translatable to the clinic.


Assuntos
Neoplasias/genética , Neoplasias/imunologia , Splicing de RNA/genética , Animais , Apresentação de Antígeno/efeitos dos fármacos , Apresentação de Antígeno/imunologia , Antígenos de Neoplasias/metabolismo , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Proliferação de Células/efeitos dos fármacos , Epitopos/imunologia , Etilenodiaminas/farmacologia , Regulação Neoplásica da Expressão Gênica/efeitos dos fármacos , Hematopoese/efeitos dos fármacos , Hematopoese/genética , Antígenos de Histocompatibilidade Classe I/metabolismo , Humanos , Inibidores de Checkpoint Imunológico/farmacologia , Imunoterapia , Inflamação/patologia , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Peptídeos/metabolismo , Isoformas de Proteínas/metabolismo , Pirróis/farmacologia , Splicing de RNA/efeitos dos fármacos , Sulfonamidas/farmacologia , Linfócitos T/efeitos dos fármacos , Linfócitos T/imunologia
9.
Phys Rev E ; 101(6-1): 062414, 2020 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32688532

RESUMO

T-cell receptors (TCR) are key proteins of the adaptive immune system, generated randomly in each individual, whose diversity underlies our ability to recognize infections and malignancies. Modeling the distribution of TCR sequences is of key importance for immunology and medical applications. Here, we compare two inference methods trained on high-throughput sequencing data: a knowledge-guided approach, which accounts for the details of sequence generation, supplemented by a physics-inspired model of selection; and a knowledge-free variational autoencoder based on deep artificial neural networks. We show that the knowledge-guided model outperforms the deep network approach at predicting TCR probabilities, while being more interpretable, at a lower computational cost.


Assuntos
Modelos Biológicos , Receptores de Antígenos de Linfócitos T/química , Receptores de Antígenos de Linfócitos T/metabolismo , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Aprendizado Profundo , Ligantes
10.
Clin Cancer Res ; 26(13): 3193-3201, 2020 07 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32205463

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Preclinical data suggest that radiotherapy (RT) is beneficial in combination with immune checkpoint blockade. Clinical trials have explored RT with single-agent immune checkpoint blockade, but no trials have reported RT with the combination of nivolumab and ipilimumab. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We conducted a phase 1 study of patients with stage IV melanoma receiving nivolumab and ipilimumab with two different dose-fractionation schemes of RT. Patients had at least one melanoma metastasis that would benefit from palliative RT and one metastasis that would not be irradiated. Nivolumab 1 mg/kg + ipilimumab 3 mg/kg and extracranial RT with a dose of 30 Gy in 10 fractions was administered in Cohort A, and then 27 Gy in 3 fractions was administered in Cohort B. The primary outcome was safety. RESULTS: Twenty patients were treated (10 in each cohort). The rates of treatment-related grade 3-4 adverse events in Cohort A and B were 40% and 30%, respectively. There were no grade ≥3 adverse events attributed to RT. Patients responded to treatment outside of the irradiated volume (Cohort A 5/10; Cohort B 1/9). No evaluable patients had progression of irradiated metastases. Immunologic changes were seen in the peripheral blood with increases in T-cell receptor diversity in some responding patients. CONCLUSIONS: RT with nivolumab and ipilimumab was safe compared with historical data of nivolumab and ipilimumab alone. Immunologic effects were observed in the peripheral blood. Randomized studies are ongoing to assess whether RT increases the efficacy of nivolumab and ipilimumab.


Assuntos
Protocolos de Quimioterapia Combinada Antineoplásica/uso terapêutico , Melanoma/patologia , Melanoma/terapia , Terapia Neoadjuvante , Adulto , Idoso , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Protocolos de Quimioterapia Combinada Antineoplásica/efeitos adversos , Biomarcadores , Quimiorradioterapia , Feminino , Humanos , Ipilimumab/administração & dosagem , Masculino , Melanoma/etiologia , Melanoma/mortalidade , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Terapia Neoadjuvante/métodos , Metástase Neoplásica , Estadiamento de Neoplasias , Nivolumabe/administração & dosagem , Prognóstico , Resultado do Tratamento
11.
Front Immunol ; 9: 1307, 2018.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29988361

RESUMO

The naïve immunoglobulin (IG) repertoire in the blood differs from the direct output of the rearrangement process. These differences stem from selection that affects the germline gene usage and the junctional nucleotides. A major complication obscuring the details of the selection mechanism in the heavy chain is the failure to properly identify the D germline and determine the nucleotide addition and deletion in the junction region. The selection affecting junctional diversity can, however, be studied in the light chain that has no D gene. We use probabilistic and deterministic models to infer and disentangle generation and selection of the light chain, using large samples of light chains sequenced from healthy donors and transgenic mice. We have previously used similar models for the beta chain of T-cell receptors and the heavy chain of IGs. Selection is observed mainly in the CDR3. The CDR3 length and mass distributions are narrower after selection than before, indicating stabilizing selection for mid-range values. Within the CDR3, proline and cysteine undergo negative selection, while glycine undergoes positive selection. The results presented here suggest structural selection maintaining the size of the CDR3 within a limited range, and preventing turns in the CDR3 region.

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