Molecular Therapy: Nucleic Acids (Jun 2023)
Identification of shared characteristics in tumor-infiltrating T cells across 15 cancers
Abstract
Tumor-infiltrating T cells are essential players in tumor immunotherapy. Great progress has been achieved in the investigation of T cell heterogeneity. However, little is well known about the shared characteristics of tumor-infiltrating T cells across cancers. In this study, we conduct a pan-cancer analysis of 349,799 T cells across 15 cancers. The results show that the same T cell types had similar expression patterns regulated by specific transcription factor (TF) regulons across cancers. Multiple T cell type transition paths were consistent in cancers. We found that TF regulons associated with CD8+ T cells transitioned to terminally differentiated effector memory (Temra) or exhausted (Tex) states were associated with patient clinical classification. We also observed universal activated cell-cell interaction pathways of tumor-infiltrating T cells in all cancers, some of which specifically mediated crosstalk in certain cell types. Moreover, consistent characteristics of TCRs in the aspect of variable and joining region genes were found across cancers. Overall, our study reveals common features of tumor-infiltrating T cells in different cancers and suggests future avenues for rational, targeted immunotherapies.