| Literature DB >> 33007259 |
Floris Dammeijer1, Mandy van Gulijk2, Evalyn E Mulder3, Melanie Lukkes4, Larissa Klaase4, Thierry van den Bosch5, Menno van Nimwegen4, Sai Ping Lau6, Kitty Latupeirissa4, Sjoerd Schetters7, Yvette van Kooyk7, Louis Boon8, Antien Moyaart5, Yvonne M Mueller9, Peter D Katsikis9, Alexander M Eggermont10, Heleen Vroman2, Ralph Stadhouders11, Rudi W Hendriks4, Jan von der Thüsen5, Dirk J Grünhagen12, Cornelis Verhoef12, Thorbald van Hall13, Joachim G Aerts14.
Abstract
PD-1/PD-L1-checkpoint blockade therapy is generally thought to relieve tumor cell-mediated suppression in the tumor microenvironment but PD-L1 is also expressed on non-tumor macrophages and conventional dendritic cells (cDCs). Here we show in mouse tumor models that tumor-draining lymph nodes (TDLNs) are enriched for tumor-specific PD-1+ T cells which closely associate with PD-L1+ cDCs. TDLN-targeted PD-L1-blockade induces enhanced anti-tumor T cell immunity by seeding the tumor site with progenitor-exhausted T cells, resulting in improved tumor control. Moreover, we show that abundant PD-1/PD-L1-interactions in TDLNs of nonmetastatic melanoma patients, but not those in corresponding tumors, associate with early distant disease recurrence. These findings point at a critical role for PD-L1 expression in TDLNs in governing systemic anti-tumor immunity, identifying high-risk patient groups amendable to adjuvant PD-1/PD-L1-blockade therapy.Entities:
Keywords: PD-1; PD-L1; T cells; checkpoint immunotherapy; dendritic cells; lymph node; tumor immunology
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33007259 DOI: 10.1016/j.ccell.2020.09.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell ISSN: 1535-6108 Impact factor: 31.743