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Resident memory CD8+ T cells in regional lymph nodes mediate immunity to metastatic melanoma

Authors :
Tyler J. Curiel
Fred W. Kolling
Kathryn A. Lewis
Nikhil Khatwani
Edward J. Usherwood
Aaron R. Hawkes
Joseph D. Phillips
Delaney E. Sullivan
Mary Jo Turk
Tamer B. Shabaneh
Nicholas K. Preiss
Christina V. Angeles
Yanding Zhao
Yina H. Huang
Jichang Han
Peisheng Zhang
Chao Cheng
Tyler G. Searles
Shaofeng Yan
Brian T. Malik
Keisuke Shirai
Jennifer L. Vella
Sandra L. Wong
Aleksey K. Molodtsov
Source :
Immunity. 54:2117-2132.e7
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Summary The nature of the anti-tumor immune response changes as primary tumors progress and metastasize. We investigated the role of resident memory (Trm) and circulating memory (Tcirm) cells in anti-tumor responses at metastatic locations using a mouse model of melanoma-associated vitiligo. We found that the transcriptional characteristics of tumor-specific CD8+ T cells were defined by the tissue of occupancy. Parabiosis revealed that tumor-specific Trm and Tcirm compartments persisted throughout visceral organs, but Trm cells dominated lymph nodes (LNs). Single-cell RNA-sequencing profiles of Trm cells in LN and skin were distinct, and T cell clonotypes that occupied both tissues were overwhelmingly maintained as Trm in LNs. Whereas Tcirm cells prevented melanoma growth in the lungs, Trm afforded long-lived protection against melanoma seeding in LNs. Expanded Trm populations were also present in melanoma-involved LNs from patients, and their transcriptional signature predicted better survival. Thus, tumor-specific Trm cells persist in LNs, restricting metastatic cancer.

Details

ISSN :
10747613
Volume :
54
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Immunity
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........dab8149e78aaf5c9495fa8c7d8a0ab3d