In situ sensory adaptation of tumor-infiltrating T lymphocytes to peptide-MHC levels elicits strong antitumor reactivity

G Dorothée, I Vergnon, F El Hage… - The Journal of …, 2005 - journals.aai.org
G Dorothée, I Vergnon, F El Hage, BLM Chansac, V Ferrand, Y Lécluse, P Opolon…
The Journal of Immunology, 2005journals.aai.org
We have isolated from tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) and PBL of a lung carcinoma
patient several tumor-specific T cell clones displaying similar peptide-MHC tetramer staining
and expressing a unique TCR. Although these clones elicited identical functional avidity and
similar cytolytic potential, only T cell clones derived from TIL efficiently lysed autologous
tumor cells. Interestingly, all of these clones expressed the same T cell surface markers
except for the TCR inhibitory molecule CD5, which was expressed at much lower levels in …
Abstract
We have isolated from tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) and PBL of a lung carcinoma patient several tumor-specific T cell clones displaying similar peptide-MHC tetramer staining and expressing a unique TCR. Although these clones elicited identical functional avidity and similar cytolytic potential, only T cell clones derived from TIL efficiently lysed autologous tumor cells. Interestingly, all of these clones expressed the same T cell surface markers except for the TCR inhibitory molecule CD5, which was expressed at much lower levels in TIL than in PBL. Video-imaging recordings demonstrated that, although both T cell clones could form stable conjugates with tumor cells, the Ca 2+ response occurred in TIL clones only. Significantly, analysis of a panel of circulating clones indicated that antitumor cytolytic activity was inversely proportional to CD5 expression levels. Importantly, CD5 levels in TIL appeared to parallel the signaling intensity of the TCR/peptide-MHC interaction. Thus, in situ regulation of CD5 expression may be a strategy used by CTL to adapt their sensitivity to intratumoral peptide-MHC levels.
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