학술논문

Tertiary lymphoid structures in the era of cancer immunotherapy
Document Type
Article
Source
Nature Reviews Cancer; June 2019, Vol. 19 Issue: 6 p307-325, 19p
Subject
Language
ISSN
1474175X; 14741768
Abstract
Tertiary lymphoid structures (TLSs) are ectopic lymphoid organs that develop in non-lymphoid tissues at sites of chronic inflammation including tumours. Key common characteristics between secondary lymphoid organogenesis and TLS neogenesis have been identified. TLSs exist under different maturation states in tumours, culminating in germinal centre formation. The mechanisms that underlie the role of TLSs in the adaptive antitumour immune response are being deciphered. The description of the correlation between TLS presence and clinical benefit in patients with cancer, suggesting that TLSs could be a prognostic and predictive factor, has drawn strong interest into investigating the role of TLSs in tumours. A current major challenge is to exploit TLSs to promote lymphocyte infiltration, activation by tumour antigens and differentiation to increase the antitumour immune response. Several approaches are being developed using chemokines, cytokines, antibodies, antigen-presenting cells or synthetic scaffolds to induce TLS formation. Strategies aiming to induce TLS neogenesis in immune-low tumours and in immune-high tumours, in this case, in combination with therapeutic agents dampening the inflammatory environment and/or with immune checkpoint inhibitors, represent promising avenues for cancer treatment. Tertiary lymphoid structures (TLSs) form outside of lymphoid tissues at sites of chronic inflammation, including tumours. This Review describes the evidence demonstrating that TLSs are critical for generating antitumour immune responses and are associated with better prognosis in certain cancer types. It also presents potential strategies aimed at inducing TLS neogenesis to improve clinical responses in poorly immunogenic cancers.