γδ T cells in human colon adenocarcinomas comprise mainly Vδ1, Vδ2, and Vδ3 cells with distinct phenotype and function.
William RodinLouis SzeponikTsvetanka RangelovaFiraol Tamiru KebedeTobias ÖsterlundPatrik SundströmStephen HoggYvonne WettergrenAntonio CosmaAnders StåhlbergElinor Bexe LindskogMarianne Quiding-JärbrinkPublished in: Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII (2024)
Γδ T cell infiltration into tumours usually correlates with improved patient outcome, but both tumour-promoting and tumoricidal effects of γδ T cells have been documented. Human γδ T cells can be divided into functionally distinct subsets based on T cell receptor (TCR) Vδ usage. Still, the contribution of these different subsets to tumour immunity remains elusive. Here, we provide a detailed γδ T cell profiling in colon tumours, using mass and flow cytometry, mRNA quantification, and TCR sequencing. δ chain usage in both the macroscopically unaffected colon mucosa and tumours varied considerably between patients, with substantial fractions of Vδ1, Vδ2, and non-Vδ1 Vδ2 cells. Sequencing of the Vδ complementarity-determining region 3 showed that almost all non-Vδ1 Vδ2 cells used Vδ3 and that tumour-infiltrating γδ clonotypes were unique for every patient. Non-Vδ1Vδ2 cells from colon tumours expressed several activation markers but few NK cell receptors and exhaustion markers. In addition, mRNA analyses showed that non-Vδ1 Vδ2 cells expressed several genes for proteins with tumour-promoting functions, such as neutrophil-recruiting chemokines, Galectin 3, and transforming growth factor-beta induced. In summary, our results show a large variation in γδ T cell subsets between individual tumours, and that Vδ3 cells make up a substantial proportion of γδ T cells in colon tumours. We suggest that individual γδ T cell composition in colon tumours may contribute to the balance between favourable and adverse immune responses, and thereby also patient outcome.
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