Frontiers in Immunology (Jan 2024)

Antigen-presenting B cells promote TCF-1+ PD1- stem-like CD8+ T-cell proliferation in glioblastoma

  • David Hou,
  • Hanxiao Wan,
  • Hanxiao Wan,
  • Joshua L. Katz,
  • Si Wang,
  • Brandyn A. Castro,
  • Brandyn A. Castro,
  • Gustavo I. Vazquez-Cervantes,
  • Victor A. Arrieta,
  • Silpol Dhiantravan,
  • Hinda Najem,
  • Aida Rashidi,
  • Tzu-yi Chia,
  • Tarlan Arjmandi,
  • Tarlan Arjmandi,
  • Jimena Collado,
  • Leah Billingham,
  • Aurora Lopez-Rosas,
  • Yu Han,
  • Adam M. Sonabend,
  • Adam M. Sonabend,
  • Amy B. Heimberger,
  • Amy B. Heimberger,
  • Peng Zhang,
  • Peng Zhang,
  • Jason Miska,
  • Jason Miska,
  • Catalina Lee-Chang,
  • Catalina Lee-Chang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2023.1295218
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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Understanding the spatial relationship and functional interaction of immune cells in glioblastoma (GBM) is critical for developing new therapeutics that overcome the highly immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. Our study showed that B and T cells form clusters within the GBM microenvironment within a 15-μm radius, suggesting that B and T cells could form immune synapses within the GBM. However, GBM-infiltrating B cells suppress the activation of CD8+ T cells. To overcome this immunosuppression, we leveraged B-cell functions by activating them with CD40 agonism, IFNγ, and BAFF to generate a potent antigen-presenting B cells named BVax. BVax had improved antigen cross-presentation potential compared to naïve B cells and were primed to use the IL15-IL15Ra mechanism to enhance T cell activation. Compared to naïve B cells, BVax could improve CD8 T cell activation and proliferation. Compared to dendritic cells (DCs), which are the current gold standard professional antigen-presenting cell, BVax promoted highly proliferative T cells in-vitro that had a stem-like memory T cell phenotype characterized by CD62L+CD44- expression, high TCF-1 expression, and low PD-1 and granzyme B expression. Adoptive transfer of BVax-activated CD8+ T cells into tumor-bearing brains led to T cell reactivation with higher TCF-1 expression and elevated granzyme B production compared to DC-activated CD8+ T cells. Adoptive transfer of BVax into an irradiated immunocompetent tumor-bearing host promoted more CD8+ T cell proliferation than adoptive transfer of DCs. Moreover, highly proliferative CD8+ T cells in the BVax group had less PD-1 expression than those highly proliferative CD8+ T cells in the DC group. The findings of this study suggest that BVax and DC could generate distinctive CD8+ T cells, which potentially serve multiple purposes in cellular vaccine development.

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