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Bystander CD4 + T cells infiltrate human tumors and are phenotypically distinct.

Shamin LiSummer ZhuangAntja HeitSi-Lin KooAaron C TanI-Ting ChowWilliam W KwokIain Beehuat TanDaniel S W TanYannick SimoniEvan William Newell
Published in: Oncoimmunology (2022)
Tumor-specific T cells likely underpin effective immune checkpoint-blockade therapies. Yet, most studies focus on Treg cells and CD8 + tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs). Here, we study CD4 + TILs in human lung and colorectal cancers and observe that non-Treg CD4 + TILs average more than 70% of total CD4 + TILs in both cancer types. Leveraging high dimensional analyses including mass cytometry, we reveal that CD4 + TILs are phenotypically heterogeneous, within each tumor and across patients. Consistently, we find different subsets of CD4 + TILs showing characteristics of effectors, tissue resident memory (Trm) or exhausted cells (expressing PD-1, CTLA-4 and CD39). In both cancer types, the frequencies of CD39 - non-Treg CD4 + TILs strongly correlate with frequencies of CD39 - CD8 + TILs, which we and others have previously shown to be enriched for cells specific for cancer-unrelated antigens (bystanders). Ex-vivo , we demonstrate that CD39 - CD4 + TILs can be specific for cancer-unrelated antigens, such as HCMV epitopes. Overall, our findings highlight that CD4 + TILs can also recognize cancer-unrelated antigens and suggest measuring CD39 expression as a straightforward way to quantify or isolate bystander CD4 + T cells.
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