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Harnessing T cell exhaustion and trogocytosis to isolate patient-derived tumor-specific TCR.

Francesco ManfrediLorena StasiSilvia BuonannoFrancesca MarzuttiniMaddalena NovielloSara MastaglioDanilo AbbatiAlessia PotenzaChiara BalestrieriBeatrice Claudia CianciottiElena TassiSara FeolaCristina ToffaloriMarco PuntaZulma Irene MagnaniBarbara CamisaElena TizianoMaria Teresa Lupo-StanghelliniRui Mamede BrancaJanne LehtiöTiina M SikanenMarkus J HaapalaVincenzo CerulloMonica CasucciLuca VagoFabio CiceriChiara BoniniEliana Ruggiero
Published in: Science advances (2023)
To study and then harness the tumor-specific T cell dynamics after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant, we typed the frequency, phenotype, and function of lymphocytes directed against tumor-associated antigens (TAAs) in 39 consecutive transplanted patients, for 1 year after transplant. We showed that TAA-specific T cells circulated in 90% of patients but display a limited effector function associated to an exhaustion phenotype, particularly in the subgroup of patients deemed to relapse, where exhausted stem cell memory T cells accumulated. Accordingly, cancer-specific cytolytic functions were relevant only when the TAA-specific T cell receptors (TCRs) were transferred into healthy, genome-edited T cells. We then exploited trogocytosis and ligandome-on-chip technology to unveil the specificities of tumor-specific TCRs retrieved from the exhausted T cell pool. Overall, we showed that harnessing circulating TAA-specific and exhausted T cells allow to isolate TCRs against TAAs and previously not described acute myeloid leukemia antigens, potentially relevant for T cell-based cancer immunotherapy.
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