Cell Reports Medicine (Sep 2021)

Effector T cell responses unleashed by regulatory T cell ablation exacerbate oral squamous cell carcinoma

  • Jaime L. Chao,
  • Michael Korzinkin,
  • Alex Zhavoronkov,
  • Ivan V. Ozerov,
  • Matthew T. Walker,
  • Kathleen Higgins,
  • Mark W. Lingen,
  • Evgeny Izumchenko,
  • Peter A. Savage

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 9
p. 100399

Abstract

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Summary: Immune suppression by CD4+FOXP3+ regulatory T (Treg) cells and tumor infiltration by CD8+ effector T cells represent two major factors impacting response to cancer immunotherapy. Using deconvolution-based transcriptional profiling of human papilloma virus (HPV)-negative oral squamous cell carcinomas (OSCCs) and other solid cancers, we demonstrate that the density of Treg cells does not correlate with that of CD8+ T cells in many tumors, revealing polarized clusters enriched for either CD8+ T cells or CD4+ Treg and conventional T cells. In a mouse model of carcinogen-induced OSCC characterized by CD4+ T cell enrichment, late-stage Treg cell ablation triggers increased densities of both CD4+ and CD8+ effector T cells within oral lesions. Notably, this intervention does not induce tumor regression but instead induces rapid emergence of invasive OSCCs via an effector T cell-dependent process. Thus, induction of a T cell-inflamed phenotype via therapeutic manipulation of Treg cells may trigger unexpected tumor-promoting effects in OSCC.

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