4.8 Article

Resident memory CD8+ T cells in regional lymph nodes mediate immunity to metastatic melanoma

Journal

IMMUNITY
Volume 54, Issue 9, Pages 2117-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.immuni.2021.08.019

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Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [R01 CA225028, R01 CA205965, R21 CA227996, F31CA232554, R01 CA054174, CA231325]
  2. Cancer Prevention Research Institute of Texas [CPRIT RR180061]
  3. O. Ross McIntyre, M.D. Endowment, Knights of the York Cross of Honor and Munck-Pfefferkorn Research Funds
  4. Owens Foundation grant
  5. Immune Monitoring Shared Resource [5P30 CA023108-40]

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The study revealed that tumor-specific Trm cells persist in lymph nodes, restraining the development of metastatic cancer and providing long-term protection against melanoma seeding. These findings suggest that Trm cells play a crucial role in preventing the spread of melanoma.
The nature of the anti-tumor immune response changes as primary tumors progress and metastasize. We investigated the role of resident memory (Trm) and circulating memory (Tcirm) cells in anti-tumor responses at metastatic locations using a mouse model of melanoma-associated vitiligo. We found that the transcriptional characteristics of tumor-specific CD8(+) T cells were defined by the tissue of occupancy. Parabiosis revealed that tumor-specific Trm and Tcirm compartments persisted throughout visceral organs, but Trm cells dominated lymph nodes (LNs). Single-cell RNA-sequencing profiles of Trm cells in LN and skin were distinct, and T cell clonotypes that occupied both tissues were overwhelmingly maintained as Trm in LNs. Whereas Tcirm cells prevented melanoma growth in the lungs, Trm afforded long-lived protection against melanoma seeding in LNs. Expanded Trm populations were also present in melanoma-involved LNs from patients, and their transcriptional signature predicted better survival. Thus, tumor-specific Trm cells persist in LNs, restricting metastatic cancer.

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