AI Article Synopsis

  • The immune phenotype of tumors plays a crucial role in predicting how well they will respond to immunotherapy, with immune-inflamed tumors typically having better responses due to high T cell infiltration.
  • Not all inflamed tumors are effective against therapy, and tumors lacking T cells (immune desert) or pushing T cells to the edges (immune excluded) show even lower response rates.
  • The new technique called skin tumor array by microporation (STAMP) allows researchers to study the development and dynamics of tumor immune phenotypes in real-time, revealing that local factors and T cell recruitment are key to understanding tumor rejection and therapy success.

Article Abstract

The immune phenotype of a tumour is a key predictor of its response to immunotherapy. Patients who respond to checkpoint blockade generally present with immune-inflamed tumours that are highly infiltrated by T cells. However, not all inflamed tumours respond to therapy, and even lower response rates occur among tumours that lack T cells (immune desert) or that spatially exclude T cells to the periphery of the tumour lesion (immune excluded). Despite the importance of these tumour immune phenotypes in patients, little is known about their development, heterogeneity or dynamics owing to the technical difficulty of tracking these features in situ. Here we introduce skin tumour array by microporation (STAMP)-a preclinical approach that combines high-throughput time-lapse imaging with next-generation sequencing of tumour arrays. Using STAMP, we followed the development of thousands of arrayed tumours in vivo to show that tumour immune phenotypes and outcomes vary between adjacent tumours and are controlled by local factors within the tumour microenvironment. Particularly, the recruitment of T cells by fibroblasts and monocytes into the tumour core was supportive of T cell cytotoxic activity and tumour rejection. Tumour immune phenotypes were dynamic over time and an early conversion to an immune-inflamed phenotype was predictive of spontaneous or therapy-induced tumour rejection. Thus, STAMP captures the dynamic relationships of the spatial, cellular and molecular components of tumour rejection and has the potential to translate therapeutic concepts into successful clinical strategies.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10284705PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06132-2DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

tumour
12
tumour immune
12
immune phenotypes
12
tumour rejection
12
tumour arrays
8
immune
6
tumours
5
situ tumour
4
arrays reveal
4
reveal early
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!