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T cell egress via lymphatic vessels is tuned by antigen encounter and limits tumor control.

Maria M SteeleAbhinav JaiswalInes DelclauxIan D DrygDhaarini MuruganJulia FemelSunny SonHaley du BoisCameron HillSancy A LeachmanYoung Hwan ChangLisa M CoussensNiroshana AnandasabapathyAmanda W Lund
Published in: Nature immunology (2023)
Antigen-specific CD8 + T cell accumulation in tumors is a prerequisite for effective immunotherapy, and yet the mechanisms of lymphocyte transit are not well defined. Here we show that tumor-associated lymphatic vessels control T cell exit from tumors via the chemokine CXCL12, and intratumoral antigen encounter tunes CXCR4 expression by effector CD8 + T cells. Only high-affinity antigen downregulates CXCR4 and upregulates the CXCL12 decoy receptor, ACKR3, thereby reducing CXCL12 sensitivity and promoting T cell retention. A diverse repertoire of functional tumor-specific CD8 + T cells, therefore, exit the tumor, which limits the pool of CD8 + T cells available to exert tumor control. CXCR4 inhibition or loss of lymphatic-specific CXCL12 boosts T cell retention and enhances tumor control. These data indicate that strategies to limit T cell egress might be an approach to boost the quantity and quality of intratumoral T cells and thereby response to immunotherapy.
Keyphrases
  • lymph node
  • immune response
  • dendritic cells
  • cell migration
  • electronic health record
  • long non coding rna