Adoptively transferred effector cells derived from naïve rather than central memory CD8+ T cells mediate superior antitumor immunity

CS Hinrichs, ZA Borman, L Cassard… - Proceedings of the …, 2009 - National Acad Sciences
CS Hinrichs, ZA Borman, L Cassard, L Gattinoni, R Spolski, Z Yu, L Sanchez-Perez
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2009National Acad Sciences
Effector cells derived from central memory CD8+ T cells were reported to engraft and survive
better than those derived from effector memory populations, suggesting that they are
superior for use in adoptive immunotherapy studies. However, previous studies did not
evaluate the relative efficacy of effector cells derived from naïve T cells. We sought to
investigate the efficacy of tumor-specific effector cells derived from naïve or central memory
T-cell subsets using transgenic or retrovirally transduced T cells engineered to express a …
Effector cells derived from central memory CD8+ T cells were reported to engraft and survive better than those derived from effector memory populations, suggesting that they are superior for use in adoptive immunotherapy studies. However, previous studies did not evaluate the relative efficacy of effector cells derived from naïve T cells. We sought to investigate the efficacy of tumor-specific effector cells derived from naïve or central memory T-cell subsets using transgenic or retrovirally transduced T cells engineered to express a tumor-specific T-cell receptor. We found that naïve, rather than central memory T cells, gave rise to an effector population that mediated superior antitumor immunity upon adoptive transfer. Effector cells developed from naïve T cells lost the expression of CD62L more rapidly than those derived from central memory T cells, but did not acquire the expression of KLRG-1, a marker for terminal differentiation and replicative senescence. Consistent with this KLRG-1 phenotype, naïve-derived cells were capable of a greater proliferative burst and had enhanced cytokine production after adoptive transfer. These results indicate that insertion of genes that confer antitumor specificity into naïve rather than central memory CD8+ T cells may allow superior efficacy upon adoptive transfer.
National Acad Sciences