CXCR6 by increasing retention of memory CD8+ T cells in the ovarian tumor microenvironment promotes immunosurveillance and control of ovarian cancer

Ravikumar Muthuswamy & Sebastiano Battaglia

Purpose

Resident memory CD8 T cells, owing to their ability to reside and persist in peripheral tissues, impart adaptive sentinel activity and amplify local immune response, and have beneficial implications for tumor surveillance and control. The current study aimed to clarify the less known chemotactic mechanisms that govern the localization, retention, and residency of memory CD8 T cells in the ovarian tumor microenvironment.

Experimental design

RNA and protein expressions of chemokine receptors in CD8+ resident memory T cells in human ovarian tumor-infiltrating CD8+ T cells and their association with survival were analyzed. The role of CXCR6 on antitumor T cells was investigated using prophylactic vaccine models in murine ovarian cancer.

Results

Chemokine receptor profiling of CD8+CD103+ resident memory tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes in patients with ovarian cancer revealed high expression of CXCR6. Analysis of The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) (ovarian cancer database revealed CXCR6 to be associated with CD103 and increased patient survival. Functional studies in mouse models of ovarian cancer revealed that CXCR6 is a marker of resident, but not circulatory, tumor-specific memory CD8+ T cells. CXCR6-deficient tumor-specific CD8+ T cells showed reduced retention in tumor tissues, leading to diminished resident memory responses and poor control of ovarian cancer.

Conclusions

CXCR6, by promoting retention in tumor tissues, serves a critical role in resident memory T cell-mediated immunosurveillance and control of ovarian cancer. Future studies warrant exploiting CXCR6 to promote resident memory responses in cancers.

Funding
Administrative CoreRacial Disparity in Bladder Cancer and Identification of Altered Metabolism in African American Compare to European Bladder CancerReprograming the tumor microenvironment to overcome multiple primary and acquired immune resistance mechanisms in ovarian cancerImmuno-Oncology Translation Network: Data Management and Resource-Sharing Center at RPCIProject 1mTOR inhibition for generating memory T cells to enhance ovarian tumor immunityIdentify the DNA Adduct and Associated Metabolic Alterations in Bladder Cancer of SmokersmTOR inhibition for generating memory T cells to enhance ovarian tumor immunityReprograming the tumor microenvironment to overcome multiple primary and acquired immune resistance mechanisms in ovarian cancerImmuno-Oncology Translation Network: Data Management and Resource-Sharing Center at RPCIAdministrative CoreProject 1Identify the DNA Adduct and Associated Metabolic Alterations in Bladder Cancer of SmokersRacial Disparity in Bladder Cancer and Identification of Altered Metabolism in African American Compare to European Bladder Cancer

NCI NIH HHS

P30 CA016056

NCI NIH HHS

R01 CA220297

NCI NIH HHS

U01 CA233085

NCI NIH HHS

U24 CA232979

NCI NIH HHS

P50 CA159981

NCI NIH HHS

R01 CA158318

NCI NIH HHS

R01 CA216426

NIH Office of the Director

R01CA158318

NIH Office of the Director

U01CA233085

NIH Office of the Director

U24 CA232979

National Cancer Institute

P30 CA016056

National Cancer Institute

P50CA159981

National Cancer Institute

R01CA216426

National Cancer Institute

R01CA220297