Tumor Cell-Intrinsic Factors Underlie Heterogeneity of Immune Cell Infiltration and Response to Immunotherapy

肿瘤细胞内在因素是免疫细胞浸润和免疫治疗反应异质性的基础

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作者:Jinyang Li,Katelyn T Byrne,Fangxue Yan,Taiji Yamazoe,Zeyu Chen,Timour Baslan,Lee P Richman,Jeffrey H Lin,Yu H Sun,Andrew J Rech,David Balli,Ceire A Hay,Yogev Sela,Allyson J Merrell,Shannon M Liudahl,Naomi Gordon,Robert J Norgard,Salina Yuan,Sixiang Yu,Timothy Chao,Shuai Ye,T S Karin Eisinger-Mathason,Robert B Faryabi,John W Tobias,Scott W Lowe,Lisa M Coussens,E John Wherry,Robert H Vonderheide,Ben Z Stanger

Abstract

The biological and functional heterogeneity between tumors-both across and within cancer types-poses a challenge for immunotherapy. To understand the factors underlying tumor immune heterogeneity and immunotherapy sensitivity, we established a library of congenic tumor cell clones from an autochthonous mouse model of pancreatic adenocarcinoma. These clones generated tumors that recapitulated T cell-inflamed and non-T-cell-inflamed tumor microenvironments upon implantation in immunocompetent mice, with distinct patterns of infiltration by immune cell subsets. Co-injecting tumor cell clones revealed the non-T-cell-inflamed phenotype is dominant and that both quantitative and qualitative features of intratumoral CD8+ T cells determine response to therapy. Transcriptomic and epigenetic analyses revealed tumor-cell-intrinsic production of the chemokine CXCL1 as a determinant of the non-T-cell-inflamed microenvironment, and ablation of CXCL1 promoted T cell infiltration and sensitivity to a combination immunotherapy regimen. Thus, tumor cell-intrinsic factors shape the tumor immune microenvironment and influence the outcome of immunotherapy.

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