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TCF-1 limits intraepithelial lymphocyte antitumor immunity in colorectal carcinoma.

Marina H YakouSonia GhilasKelly TranYang LiaoShoukat Afshar-SterleAnita KumariKevin SchmidChristine DijkstraChantelle InguantiSimone OstrouskaJordan WilcoxMaxine SmithPavitha ParathanAmr AllamHai-Hui XueGabrielle T BelzJohn M MariadasonAndreas BehrenGrant R DrummondRoland RuscherDavid S WilliamsBhupinder PalWei ShiMatthias ErnstDinesh RaghuLisa A Mielke
Published in: Science immunology (2023)
Intraepithelial lymphocytes (IELs), including αβ and γδ T cells (T-IELs), constantly survey and play a critical role in maintaining the gastrointestinal epithelium. We show that cytotoxic molecules important for defense against cancer were highly expressed by T-IELs in the small intestine. In contrast, abundance of colonic T-IELs was dependent on the microbiome and displayed higher expression of TCF-1/ TCF7 and a reduced effector and cytotoxic profile, including low expression of granzymes. Targeted deletion of TCF-1 in γδ T-IELs induced a distinct effector profile and reduced colon tumor formation in mice. In addition, TCF-1 expression was significantly reduced in γδ T-IELs present in human colorectal cancers (CRCs) compared with normal healthy colon, which strongly correlated with an enhanced γδ T-IEL effector phenotype and improved patient survival. Our work identifies TCF-1 as a colon-specific T-IEL transcriptional regulator that could inform new immunotherapy strategies to treat CRC.
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