4.8 Article

Extricating human tumour immune alterations from tissue inflammation

Journal

NATURE
Volume 605, Issue 7911, Pages 728-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04718-w

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Washington Research Foundation (WRF)
  2. NIH [R01AI123323, R21DE026565]
  3. FHCRC President's Young Investigator Award
  4. American Association of Immunologists (AAI) Intersect Fellowship Program for Computational Scientists and Immunologists
  5. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [T32 AI007509-20]
  6. National Cancer Institute [F99 CA245735]
  7. Bezos family
  8. FHCRC Immunotherapy integrated research center
  9. ORIP grant [S10OD028685]

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Immunotherapies have shown great success in cancer treatment, but face challenges. Current treatment approaches target pathways not only in tumors but also in other tissues, complicating treatment. Single-cell analysis revealed significant overlap in immune cell composition and phenotype between tumors and inflamed tissues.
Immunotherapies have achieved remarkable successes in the treatment of cancer, but major challenges remain(1,2). An inherent weakness of current treatment approaches is that therapeutically targeted pathways are not restricted to tumours, but are also found in other tissue microenvironments, complicating treatment(3,4). Despite great efforts to define inflammatory processes in the tumour microenvironment, the understanding of tumour-unique immune alterations is limited by a knowledge gap regarding the immune cell populations in inflamed human tissues. Here, in an effort to identify such tumour-enriched immune alterations, we used complementary single-cell analysis approaches to interrogate the immune infiltrate in human head and neck squamous cell carcinomas and site-matched non-malignant, inflamed tissues. Our analysis revealed a large overlap in the composition and phenotype of immune cells in tumour and inflamed tissues. Computational analysis identified tumour-enriched immune cell interactions, one of which yields a large population of regulatory T (T-reg) cells that is highly enriched in the tumour and uniquely identified among all haematopoietically-derived cells in blood and tissue by co-expression of ICOS and IL-1 receptor type 1 (IL1R1). We provide evidence that these intratumoural IL1R1(+)T(reg) cells had responded to antigen recently and demonstrate that they are clonally expanded with superior suppressive function compared with IL1R1(-)T(reg) cells. In addition to identifying extensive immunological congruence between inflamed tissues and tumours as well as tumour-specific changes with direct disease relevance, our work also provides a blueprint for extricating disease-specific changes from general inflammation-associated patterns.

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