AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the role of γδ T cell subsets in colon tumors, revealing that different subsets may have varying effects on tumor immunity and patient outcomes.
  • Significant differences in δ chain usage were observed in the colon mucosa and tumors of patients, particularly highlighting the prevalence of Vδ3 cells in tumors.
  • The findings suggest that the composition of γδ T cells, especially the presence of non-Vδ1 Vδ2 cells with tumor-promoting characteristics, could influence immune responses and overall patient prognosis.

Article Abstract

Γδ T cell infiltration into tumours usually correlates with improved patient outcome, but both tumour-promoting and tumoricidal effects of γδ T cells have been documented. Human γδ T cells can be divided into functionally distinct subsets based on T cell receptor (TCR) Vδ usage. Still, the contribution of these different subsets to tumour immunity remains elusive. Here, we provide a detailed γδ T cell profiling in colon tumours, using mass and flow cytometry, mRNA quantification, and TCR sequencing. δ chain usage in both the macroscopically unaffected colon mucosa and tumours varied considerably between patients, with substantial fractions of Vδ1, Vδ2, and non-Vδ1 Vδ2 cells. Sequencing of the Vδ complementarity-determining region 3 showed that almost all non-Vδ1 Vδ2 cells used Vδ3 and that tumour-infiltrating γδ clonotypes were unique for every patient. Non-Vδ1Vδ2 cells from colon tumours expressed several activation markers but few NK cell receptors and exhaustion markers. In addition, mRNA analyses showed that non-Vδ1 Vδ2 cells expressed several genes for proteins with tumour-promoting functions, such as neutrophil-recruiting chemokines, Galectin 3, and transforming growth factor-beta induced. In summary, our results show a large variation in γδ T cell subsets between individual tumours, and that Vδ3 cells make up a substantial proportion of γδ T cells in colon tumours. We suggest that individual γδ T cell composition in colon tumours may contribute to the balance between favourable and adverse immune responses, and thereby also patient outcome.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11219682PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00262-024-03758-7DOI Listing

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