Frontiers in Immunology (Apr 2022)

Characterising Distinct Migratory Profiles of Infiltrating T-Cell Subsets in Human Glioblastoma

  • Paris M. Kollis,
  • Paris M. Kollis,
  • Lisa M. Ebert,
  • Lisa M. Ebert,
  • Lisa M. Ebert,
  • John Toubia,
  • Cameron R. Bastow,
  • Rebecca J. Ormsby,
  • Santosh I. Poonnoose,
  • Santosh I. Poonnoose,
  • Sakthi Lenin,
  • Melinda N. Tea,
  • Stuart M. Pitson,
  • Stuart M. Pitson,
  • Guillermo A. Gomez,
  • Michael P. Brown,
  • Michael P. Brown,
  • Michael P. Brown,
  • Tessa Gargett,
  • Tessa Gargett,
  • Tessa Gargett

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.850226
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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Glioblastoma is the most common and aggressive form of primary brain cancer, with no improvements in the 5-year survival rate of 4.6% over the past three decades. T-cell-based immunotherapies such as immune-checkpoint inhibitors and chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy have prolonged the survival of patients with other cancers and have undergone early-phase clinical evaluation in glioblastoma patients. However, a major challenge for T-cell-based immunotherapy of glioblastoma and other solid cancers is T-cell infiltration into tumours. This process is mediated by chemokine-chemokine receptor and integrin-adhesion molecule interactions, yet the specific nature of the molecules that may facilitate T-cell homing into glioblastoma are unknown. Here, we have characterised chemokine receptor and integrin expression profiles of endogenous glioblastoma-infiltrating T cells, and the chemokine expression profile of glioblastoma-associated cells, by single-cell RNA-sequencing. Subsequently, chemokine receptors and integrins were validated at the protein level to reveal enrichment of receptors CCR2, CCR5, CXCR3, CXCR4, CXCR6, CD49a, and CD49d in glioblastoma-infiltrating T-cell populations relative to T cells in matched patient peripheral blood. Complementary chemokine ligand expression was then validated in glioblastoma biopsies and glioblastoma-derived primary cell cultures. Together, enriched expression of homing receptor-ligand pairs identified in this study implicate a potential role in mediating T-cell infiltration into glioblastoma. Importantly, our data characterising the migratory receptors on endogenous tumour-infiltrating T cells could be exploited to enhance the tumour-homing properties of future T-cell immunotherapies for glioblastoma.

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