4.8 Article

Expression of RORγt Marks a Pathogenic Regulatory T Cell Subset in Human Colon Cancer

Journal

SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE
Volume 4, Issue 164, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.3004566

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Northwestern University Interdepartmental ImmunoBiology Flow Cytometry Core Facility
  2. Eisenberg Foundation
  3. Northwestern University Flow Cytometry Facility
  4. Cancer Center Support Grant (National Cancer Institute) [CA060553]
  5. NIH [1R01CA160436-01, AI089954, AI091962, K08AI080836-01 01]
  6. Zell Family Award
  7. Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center
  8. Pew Scholarship
  9. Cancer Research Institute Investigator Award
  10. American Society of Transplantation Basic Science Fellowship Award

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The role of regulatory T cells (T-regs) in human colon cancer (CC) remains controversial: high densities of tumor-infiltrating T-regs can correlate with better or worse clinical outcomes depending on the study. In mouse models of cancer, T-regs have been reported to suppress inflammation and protect the host, suppress T cells and protect the tumor, or even have direct cancer-promoting attributes. These different effects may result from the presence of different T-reg subsets. We report the preferential expansion of a T-reg subset in human CC with potent T cell-suppressive, but compromised anti-inflammatory, properties; these cells are distinguished from T-regs present in healthy donors by their coexpression of Foxp3 and ROR gamma t. T-regs with similar attributes were found to be expanded in mouse models of hereditary polyposis. Indeed, ablation of the ROR gamma t gene in Foxp3(+) cells in polyp-prone mice stabilized T-reg anti-inflammatory functions, suppressed inflammation, improved polyp-specific immune surveillance, and severely attenuated polyposis. Ablation of interleukin-6 (IL-6), IL-23, IL-17, or tumor necrosis factor-alpha in polyp-prone mice reduced polyp number but not to the same extent as loss of ROR gamma t. Surprisingly, loss of IL-17A had a dual effect: IL-17A-deficient mice had fewer polyps but continued to have ROR gamma t(+) T-regs and developed invasive cancer. Thus, we conclude that ROR gamma t has a central role in determining the balance between protective and pathogenic T-regs in CC and that T-reg subtype regulates inflammation, potency of immune surveillance, and severity of disease outcome.

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