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Sequestration of T cells in bone marrow in the setting of glioblastoma and other intracranial tumors.

Pakawat ChongsathidkietChristina JacksonSyohei KoyamaFranziska LoebelXiuyu CuiSamuel Harrison FarberKarolina WoronieckaAladine A ElsamadicyCosette A DechantHanna R KemenyLuis Sanchez-PerezTooba A CheemaNicholas C SoudersJames E HerndonJean-Valery CoumansJeffrey I EverittBrian V NahedJohn H SampsonMichael Dee GunnRobert L MartuzaGlenn DranoffWilliam T CurryPeter E Fecci
Published in: Nature medicine (2018)
T cell dysfunction contributes to tumor immune escape in patients with cancer and is particularly severe amidst glioblastoma (GBM). Among other defects, T cell lymphopenia is characteristic, yet often attributed to treatment. We reveal that even treatment-naïve subjects and mice with GBM can harbor AIDS-level CD4 counts, as well as contracted, T cell-deficient lymphoid organs. Missing naïve T cells are instead found sequestered in large numbers in the bone marrow. This phenomenon characterizes not only GBM but a variety of other cancers, although only when tumors are introduced into the intracranial compartment. T cell sequestration is accompanied by tumor-imposed loss of S1P1 from the T cell surface and is reversible upon precluding S1P1 internalization. In murine models of GBM, hindering S1P1 internalization and reversing sequestration licenses T cell-activating therapies that were previously ineffective. Sequestration of T cells in bone marrow is therefore a tumor-adaptive mode of T cell dysfunction, whose reversal may constitute a promising immunotherapeutic adjunct.
Keyphrases
  • bone marrow
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • cell surface
  • metabolic syndrome
  • gene expression
  • type diabetes
  • adipose tissue
  • antiretroviral therapy
  • smoking cessation