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Microenvironmental landscape of human melanoma brain metastases in response to immune checkpoint inhibition

Authors :
Christopher Alvarez-Breckenridge
Samuel C. Markson
Jackson H. Stocking
Naema Nayyar
Matt Lastrapes
Matthew R. Strickland
Albert E. Kim
Magali de Sauvage
Ashish Dahal
Juliana M. Larson
Joana L. Mora
Andrew W. Navia
Robert H. Klein
Benjamin M. Kuter
Corey M. Gill
Mia Bertalan
Brian Shaw
Alexander Kaplan
Megha Subramanian
Aarushi Jain
Swaminathan Kumar
Husain Danish
Michael White
Osmaan Shahid
Kristen E. Pauken
Brian C. Miller
Dennie T. Frederick
Christine Hebert
McKenzie Shaw
Maria Martinez-Lage
Matthew Frosch
Nancy Wang
Elizabeth Gerstner
Brian V. Nahed
William T. Curry
Bob Carter
Daniel P. Cahill
Genevieve Marie Boland
Benjamin Izar
Michael A. Davies
Arlene H. Sharpe
Mario L. Suvà
Ryan J. Sullivan
Priscilla K. Brastianos
Scott L. Carter
Source :
Cancer Immunol Res
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Melanoma-derived brain metastases (MBM) represent an unmet clinical need because central nervous system progression is frequently an end stage of the disease. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) provide a clinical opportunity against MBM; however, the MBM tumor microenvironment (TME) has not been fully elucidated in the context of ICI. To dissect unique elements of the MBM TME and correlates of MBM response to ICI, we collected 32 fresh MBM and performed single-cell RNA sequencing of the MBM TME and T-cell receptor clonotyping on T cells from MBM and matched blood and extracranial lesions. We observed myeloid phenotypic heterogeneity in the MBM TME, most notably multiple distinct neutrophil states, including an IL8-expressing population that correlated with malignant cell epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition. In addition, we observed significant relationships between intracranial T-cell phenotypes and the distribution of T-cell clonotypes intracranially and peripherally. We found that the phenotype, clonotype, and overall number of MBM-infiltrating T cells were associated with response to ICI, suggesting that ICI-responsive MBMs interact with peripheral blood in a manner similar to extracranial lesions. These data identify unique features of the MBM TME that may represent potential targets to improve clinical outcomes for patients with MBM.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer Immunol Res
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....20edbdce0d8007b51c4ae75d9cb53333