Radiation-induced eosinophils improve cytotoxic T lymphocyte recruitment and response to immunotherapy.
Jia-Nan ChengWen LuoChengdu SunZheng JinXianghua ZengPeter B AlexanderZhihua GongXin XiaXiaofang DingShouxia XuPing ZouYisong Y WanQingzhu JiaQi-Jing LiBo ZhuPublished in: Science advances (2021)
The efficacy of cancer immunotherapy is dictated by CD8+ T cell infiltration and the nature of the tumor microenvironment (TME). By inflaming the TME to favor CD8+ T cell immunity, radiation is now widely considered as a neoadjuvant for immunomodulation. Here, we observed that local irradiation enhances the infiltration of intratumoral eosinophils, and depletion of eosinophil dampens CD8+ T cell infiltration and diminishes the anti-tumor effectiveness of radiation. Retrospectively, we identified a strong correlation between eosinophilia and survival benefit in radiation-treated cancer patients. Experimentally, we further show that radiation enhances the intratumoral infiltration of adoptive transferred T cells therapy, bolstering eosinophils by intravenous interleukin-5 administration promotes the efficacy of radiation-induced abscopal effect. Together, these results suggest that eosinophil mobilization can be considered as a mechanistically relevant biomarker for predicting the effectiveness of pre-immunotherapy radiation, as well as a new strategy to enhance T cell-mediated immunotherapy against cancers.