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Exogenous signaling repairs defective T cell signaling inside the tumor microenvironment for better immunity
Casey Moore, Joonbeom Bae, Longchao Liu, Huiyu Li, Yang-Xin Fu, Jian Qiao
Casey Moore, Joonbeom Bae, Longchao Liu, Huiyu Li, Yang-Xin Fu, Jian Qiao
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Research Article Immunology Oncology

Exogenous signaling repairs defective T cell signaling inside the tumor microenvironment for better immunity

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Abstract

It is known that tumor-reactive T cells are initially activated in the draining lymph node, but it is not well known whether and how tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) are reactivated in the tumor microenvironment (TME). We hypothesize that defective T cell receptor (TCR) signaling and cosignals in the TME limit T cell reactivation. To address this, we designed a mesenchymal stromal cell–based delivery of local membrane-bound anti-CD3 and/or cosignals to explore their contribution to reactivate T cells inside the TME. Combined anti-CD3 and CD40L rather than CD80 led to superior antitumor efficacy compared with either alone. Mechanistically, TCR activation of preexisting CD8+ T cells synergized with CD40L activation of DCs inside the TME for optimum tumor control. Exogenous TCR signals could better reactivate TILs that then exited to attack distal tumors. This study supplies further evidence that TCR signaling for T cell reactivation in the TME is defective but can be rescued by proper exogenous signals.

Authors

Casey Moore, Joonbeom Bae, Longchao Liu, Huiyu Li, Yang-Xin Fu, Jian Qiao

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