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Data from Single-Cell Transcriptome Analysis Reveals Disease-Defining T-cell Subsets in the Tumor Microenvironment of Classic Hodgkin Lymphoma

Authors :
Christian Steidl
Sohrab P. Shah
Akil Merchant
Anja Mottok
Brad H. Nelson
Gerald Krystal
David W. Scott
Kerry J. Savage
Andrew P. Weng
Pedro Farinha
Jiarui Ding
Saeed Saberi
Jubin Kim
Allen W. Zhang
Johanna Veldman
Talia Goodyear
Daniel Kos
Chanel Ghesquiere
Shannon Healy
Michael Y. Li
Adèle Telenius
Bruce W. Woolcock
Elena Viganò
Vivian Lam
Tomoko Miyata-Takata
Xuehai Wang
Michael Nissen
Elizabeth A. Chavez
Anthony Colombo
Monirath Hav
Katy Milne
Katsuyoshi Takata
Lauren C. Chong
Tomohiro Aoki
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Hodgkin lymphoma is characterized by an extensively dominant tumor microenvironment (TME) composed of different types of noncancerous immune cells with rare malignant cells. Characterization of the cellular components and their spatial relationship is crucial to understanding cross-talk and therapeutic targeting in the TME. We performed single-cell RNA sequencing of more than 127,000 cells from 22 Hodgkin lymphoma tissue specimens and 5 reactive lymph nodes, profiling for the first time the phenotype of the Hodgkin lymphoma–specific immune microenvironment at single-cell resolution. Single-cell expression profiling identified a novel Hodgkin lymphoma–associated subset of T cells with prominent expression of the inhibitory receptor LAG3, and functional analyses established this LAG3+ T-cell population as a mediator of immunosuppression. Multiplexed spatial assessment of immune cells in the microenvironment also revealed increased LAG3+ T cells in the direct vicinity of MHC class II–deficient tumor cells. Our findings provide novel insights into TME biology and suggest new approaches to immune-checkpoint targeting in Hodgkin lymphoma.Significance:We provide detailed functional and spatial characteristics of immune cells in classic Hodgkin lymphoma at single-cell resolution. Specifically, we identified a regulatory T-cell–like immunosuppressive subset of LAG3+ T cells contributing to the immune-escape phenotype. Our insights aid in the development of novel biomarkers and combination treatment strategies targeting immune checkpoints.See related commentary by Fisher and Oh, p. 342.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 327

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........135781b507e54ad945f17cd2500c7549
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/2159-8290.c.6547852.v1