Stem-like CD8 T cells mediate response of adoptive cell immunotherapy against human cancer.

Journal: Science (New York, N.Y.)
Published:
Abstract

Adoptive T cell therapy (ACT) using ex vivo-expanded autologous tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) can mediate complete regression of certain human cancers. The impact of TIL phenotypes on clinical success of TIL-ACT is currently unclear. Using high-dimensional analysis of human ACT products, we identified a memory-progenitor CD39-negative stem-like phenotype (CD39-CD69-) associated with complete cancer regression and TIL persistence and a terminally differentiated CD39-positive state (CD39+CD69+) associated with poor TIL persistence. Most antitumor neoantigen-reactive TILs were found in the differentiated CD39+ state. However, ACT responders retained a pool of CD39- stem-like neoantigen-specific TILs that was lacking in ACT nonresponders. Tumor-reactive stem-like TILs were capable of self-renewal, expansion, persistence, and superior antitumor response in vivo. These data suggest that TIL subsets mediating ACT response are distinct from TIL subsets enriched for antitumor reactivity.

Authors
Sri Krishna, Frank Lowery, Amy Copeland, Erol Bahadiroglu, Ratnadeep Mukherjee, Li Jia, James Anibal, Abraham Sachs, Serifat Adebola, Devikala Gurusamy, Zhiya Yu, Victoria Hill, Jared Gartner, Yong Li, Maria Parkhurst, Biman Paria, Pia Kvistborg, Michael Kelly, Stephanie Goff, Grégoire Altan Bonnet, Paul Robbins, Steven Rosenberg
Relevant Conditions

Melanoma