학술논문

Mass Cytometry Analysis Reveals that Specific Intratumoral CD4+ T Cell Subsets Correlate with Patient Survival in Follicular Lymphoma
Document Type
article
Source
Cell Reports, Vol 26, Iss 8, Pp 2178-2193.e3 (2019)
Subject
Biology (General)
QH301-705.5
Language
English
ISSN
2211-1247
Abstract
Summary: Follicular lymphoma (FL) is an indolent B cell malignancy characterized by an extensive but poorly functional T cell infiltrate in the tumor microenvironment. Using mass cytometry, we identified at least 12 subsets of intratumoral CD4+ T cells, 3 of which were unique to FL biopsies versus control tissues. Of these subsets, the frequency of naive T cells correlated with improved patient survival. Although total PD-1+ T cell numbers were not associated with patient outcome, specific PD-1+ T cell subpopulations were associated with poor survival. Intratumoral T cells lacking CD27 and CD28 co-stimulatory receptor expression were enriched in FL and correlated with inferior patient outcomes. In vitro models revealed that CD70+ lymphoma cells played an important role in expanding this population. Taken together, our mass cytometry results identified CD4+ memory T cell populations that are poorly functional due to loss of co-stimulatory receptor expression and are associated with an inferior survival in FL. : Yang et al. utilize mass cytometry (CyTOF) to characterize intratumoral T cells and explore the clinical relevance of T cell subsets in follicular lymphoma (FL). Clustering analysis reveals an immune signature with reduced expression of co-stimulatory molecules on intratumoral T cells that correlated with a poor prognosis in FL. Keywords: mass cytometry, CyTOF, co-stimulatory receptor, immune signature, follicular lymphoma, CD27, PD-1, intratumoral CD4+ T cell, CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells, patient survival