Bougherara Houcine, Mansuet-Lupo Audrey, Alifano Marco, Ngô Charlotte, Damotte Diane, Le Frère-Belda Marie-Aude, Donnadieu Emmanuel, Peranzoni Elisa
INSERM U1016, Institut Cochin , Paris , France ; CNRS, UMR8104 , Paris , France ; Université Paris Descartes, Sorbonne Paris Cité , Paris , France.
Université Paris Descartes, Sorbonne Paris Cité , Paris , France ; Department of Pathology, Paris Centre University Hospitals, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris , Paris , France ; Cancer and Immune Escape, Cordeliers Research Center, INSERM U1138 , Paris , France ; University Pierre and Marie Curie , Paris , France.
Front Immunol. 2015 Oct 12;6:500. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2015.00500. eCollection 2015.
T cells play a key role in the battle against cancer. To perform their antitumor activities, T cells need to adequately respond to tumor antigens by establishing contacts with either malignant cells or antigen-presenting cells. These latter functions rely on a series of migratory steps that go from entry of T cells into the tumor followed by their locomotion in the tumor stroma. Our knowledge of how T cells migrate within tumors mainly comes from experiments performed in mouse models. Whereas such systems have greatly advanced our understanding, they do not always faithfully recapitulate the disease observed in cancer patients. We previously described a technique based on tissue slices that enables to track with real-time imaging microscopy the motile behavior of fluorescent T cells plated onto fresh sections of human lung tumors. We have now refined this approach to monitor the locomotion of resident tumor-infiltrating CD8 T cells labeled with fluorescently coupled antibodies. Using this approach, our findings reveal that CD8 T cells accumulate in the stroma of ovarian and lung carcinomas but move slowly in this compartment. Conversely, even though less populated, tumors islets were found to be zones of faster migration for resident CD8 T cells. We also confirm the key role played by collagen fibers, which, by their orientation, spacing and density, control the distribution and migration of resident CD8 T cells within the tumor stroma. We have subsequently demonstrated that, under some physical tissue constraints, CD8 T cells exhibited a mode of migration characterized by alternate forward and backward movements. In sum, using an ex vivo assay to track CD8 T cells in fresh human tumor tissues, we have identified the extracellular matrix as a major stromal component in influencing T cell migration, thereby impacting the control of tumor growth. This approach will aid in the development and testing of novel immunotherapy strategies to promote T cell migration in tumors.
T细胞在对抗癌症的战斗中发挥着关键作用。为了执行其抗肿瘤活性,T细胞需要通过与恶性细胞或抗原呈递细胞建立接触来充分响应肿瘤抗原。这些后者的功能依赖于一系列迁移步骤,从T细胞进入肿瘤开始,随后在肿瘤基质中移动。我们对T细胞如何在肿瘤内迁移的了解主要来自于在小鼠模型中进行的实验。虽然这样的系统极大地推进了我们的理解,但它们并不总是如实地重现癌症患者中观察到的疾病。我们之前描述了一种基于组织切片的技术,该技术能够通过实时成像显微镜跟踪接种到人类肺肿瘤新鲜切片上的荧光T细胞的运动行为。我们现在已经改进了这种方法,以监测用荧光偶联抗体标记的驻留肿瘤浸润性CD8 T细胞的运动。使用这种方法,我们的研究结果表明,CD8 T细胞在卵巢癌和肺癌的基质中积累,但在这个隔室中移动缓慢。相反,尽管细胞数量较少,但肿瘤小岛被发现是驻留CD8 T细胞迁移较快的区域。我们还证实了胶原纤维所起的关键作用,胶原纤维通过其方向、间距和密度控制驻留CD8 T细胞在肿瘤基质内的分布和迁移。我们随后证明,在一些物理组织限制下,CD8 T细胞表现出一种以交替向前和向后运动为特征的迁移模式。总之,通过使用体外测定法在新鲜的人类肿瘤组织中跟踪CD8 T细胞,我们已经确定细胞外基质是影响T细胞迁移的主要基质成分,从而影响肿瘤生长的控制。这种方法将有助于开发和测试促进T细胞在肿瘤中迁移的新型免疫治疗策略。