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Adoptively transferred Vγ9Vδ2 T cells show potent antitumor effects in a preclinical B cell lymphomagenesis model
Nicholas A. Zumwalde, … , Shannon C. Kenney, Jenny E. Gumperz
Nicholas A. Zumwalde, … , Shannon C. Kenney, Jenny E. Gumperz
Published July 6, 2017
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2017;2(13):e93179. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.93179.
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Research Article Immunology Oncology

Adoptively transferred Vγ9Vδ2 T cells show potent antitumor effects in a preclinical B cell lymphomagenesis model

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Abstract

A central issue for adoptive cellular immunotherapy is overcoming immunosuppressive signals to achieve tumor clearance. While γδ T cells are known to be potent cytolytic effectors that can kill a variety of cancers, it is not clear whether they are inhibited by suppressive ligands expressed in tumor microenvironments. Here, we have used a powerful preclinical model where EBV infection drives the de novo generation of human B cell lymphomas in vivo, and autologous T lymphocytes are held in check by PD-1/CTLA-4–mediated inhibition. We show that a single dose of adoptively transferred Vδ2+ T cells has potent antitumor effects, even in the absence of checkpoint blockade or activating compounds. Vδ2+ T cell immunotherapy given within the first 5 days of EBV infection almost completely prevented the outgrowth of tumors. Vδ2+ T cell immunotherapy given more than 3 weeks after infection (after neoplastic transformation is evident) resulted in a dramatic reduction in tumor burden. The immunotherapeutic Vδ2+ T cells maintained low cell surface expression of PD-1 in vivo, and their recruitment to tumors was followed by a decrease in B cells expressing PD-L1 and PD-L2 inhibitory ligands. These results suggest that adoptively transferred PD-1lo Vδ2+ T cells circumvent the tumor checkpoint environment in vivo.

Authors

Nicholas A. Zumwalde, Akshat Sharma, Xuequn Xu, Shidong Ma, Christine L. Schneider, James C. Romero-Masters, Amy W. Hudson, Annette Gendron-Fitzpatrick, Shannon C. Kenney, Jenny E. Gumperz

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Figure 8

Recruitment of γδ T cells and analysis of tumor B cells after late time point γδ T cell administration.

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Recruitment of γδ T cells and analysis of tumor B cells after late time ...
(A) Light microscopic images (×10 magnification) of IHC of serial sections of tumor tissue from a γδ T cell–treated mouse showing cells expressing the viral protein EBNA2 (left image) or CD3 (right image). T cells are observed within the blood vessel in the middle of the field, as well as infiltrating the surrounding tissue in areas where EBNA2+ cells are localized. (B) Adoptively transferred γδ T cells appear slightly enriched in tumor tissue compared with spleen. Left plot: percentage of human T cells expressing Vδ2 in paired spleen versus tumor tissue samples from independent mice. Tissues were harvested 2 days after administration of γδ T cell immunotherapy. The P value was calculated using a paired, nonparametric t test (Wilcoxon signed-rank test). Right plot: percentage of the adoptively transferred cells in spleen versus tumor expressing a Vγ2Vδ2+ TCR. The dashed line shows the frequency of γδ T cells in the injected population; symbols show mean and standard deviations of 4 replicate analyses each of spleen and tumor tissue. The P value comparing spleen versus tumor frequencies (horizontal line) was calculated using an unpaired parametric t test; the P value comparing tumor mean to the γδ T cell frequency of the injected cells (vertical bar) was calculated using a 1-sample, 2-tailed t test. (C) B cells as a percentage of the total human cells in tumor tissue from a series of mice that were administered γδ T cells (dark triangles) or vehicle (light triangles). Tumors were harvested at the indicated times after adoptive transfer or mock treatment. The P value was calculated using a 2-tailed nonparametric t test (Mann-Whitney analysis). (D) Flow cytometric analysis of PD-L1 and PD-L2 staining on tumor B cells. Filled gray histograms show results from a mouse given vehicle (PBS-tx); black line shows results from a mouse given γδ T cells. tx, transfer.

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