AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on HPV-negative head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), which is resistant to treatment and has limited immunotherapy responses.
  • Researchers extracted tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) from 31 HNSCC patients and analyzed their function and cancer-targeting ability.
  • Results revealed that TILs can still function effectively despite expressing exhaustion markers, indicating the potential for developing personalized T cell therapies for HNSCC patients.

Article Abstract

Background: Human papillomavirus (HPV)-negative head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) remains a treatment-resistance disease with limited response to immunotherapy. While T cells in HNSCC are known to display phenotypic dysfunction, whether they retain rescuable functional capacity and tumor-killing capability remains unclear.

Methods: To investigate the functionality and tumor-specificity of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) across HNSCCs, malignant cell lines and TILs were derived from 31 HPV-negative HNSCCs at the time of standard surgical resection. T cell functional capacity was evaluated through ex vivo expansion, immunophenotyping, and IsoLight single-cell proteomics. Tumor-specificity was investigated through both bulk and single-cell tumor-TIL co-culture.

Results: TILs could be successfully generated from 24 patients (77%), including both previously untreated and radiation recurrent HNSCCs. We demonstrate that across HNSCCs, TILs express multiple exhaustion markers but maintain a predominantly effector memory phenotype. After ex vivo expansion, TILs retain immunogenic functionality even from radiation-resistant, exhausted, and T cell-depleted disease. We further demonstrate tumor-specificity of T cells across HNSCC patients through patient-matched malignant cell-T cell co-culture. Finally, we use optofluidic technology to establish an autologous single tumor cell-single T cell co-culture platform for HNSCC. Cells derived from three HNSCC patients underwent single-cell co-culture which enabled identification and visualization of individual tumor-killing TILs in real-time in all patients.

Conclusions: These studies show that cancer-specific T cells exist across HNSCC patients with rescuable immunogenicity and can be identified on a single-cell level. These data lay the foundation for development of patient-specific T cell immunotherapies in HNSCC.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10851216PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tranon.2024.101899DOI Listing

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