CCL22-specific T Cells: Modulating the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

CCL22-specific T Cells : Modulating the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. / Martinenaite, Evelina; Munir Ahmad, Shamaila; Hansen, Morten; Met, Özcan; Westergaard, Marie Wulff; Larsen, Stine Kiaer; Klausen, Tobias Wirenfeldt; Donia, Marco; Svane, Inge Marie; Andersen, Mads Hald.

In: OncoImmunology, Vol. 5, No. 11, e1238541, 2016.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Martinenaite, E, Munir Ahmad, S, Hansen, M, Met, Ö, Westergaard, MW, Larsen, SK, Klausen, TW, Donia, M, Svane, IM & Andersen, MH 2016, 'CCL22-specific T Cells: Modulating the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment', OncoImmunology, vol. 5, no. 11, e1238541. https://doi.org/10.1080/2162402X.2016.1238541

APA

Martinenaite, E., Munir Ahmad, S., Hansen, M., Met, Ö., Westergaard, M. W., Larsen, S. K., Klausen, T. W., Donia, M., Svane, I. M., & Andersen, M. H. (2016). CCL22-specific T Cells: Modulating the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. OncoImmunology, 5(11), [e1238541]. https://doi.org/10.1080/2162402X.2016.1238541

Vancouver

Martinenaite E, Munir Ahmad S, Hansen M, Met Ö, Westergaard MW, Larsen SK et al. CCL22-specific T Cells: Modulating the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. OncoImmunology. 2016;5(11). e1238541. https://doi.org/10.1080/2162402X.2016.1238541

Author

Martinenaite, Evelina ; Munir Ahmad, Shamaila ; Hansen, Morten ; Met, Özcan ; Westergaard, Marie Wulff ; Larsen, Stine Kiaer ; Klausen, Tobias Wirenfeldt ; Donia, Marco ; Svane, Inge Marie ; Andersen, Mads Hald. / CCL22-specific T Cells : Modulating the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. In: OncoImmunology. 2016 ; Vol. 5, No. 11.

Bibtex

@article{2ca7fd4ee3624b10bad9622158b7dc9f,
title = "CCL22-specific T Cells: Modulating the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment",
abstract = "Tumor cells and tumor-infiltrating macrophages produce the chemokine CCL22, which attracts regulatory T cells (Tregs) into the tumor microenvironment, decreasing anticancer immunity. Here, we investigated the possibility of targeting CCL22-expressing cells by activating specific T cells. We analyzed the CCL22 protein signal sequence, identifying a human leukocyte antigen A2- (HLA-A2-) restricted peptide epitope, which we then used to stimulate peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PMBCs) to expand populations of CCL22-specific T cells in vitro. T cells recognizing an epitope derived from the signal-peptide of CCL22 will recognize CCL22-expressing cells even though CCL22 is secreted out of the cell. CCL22-specific T cells recognized and killed CCL22-expressing cancer cells. Furthermore, CCL22-specific T cells lysed acute monocytic leukemia cells in a CCL22 expression-dependent manner. Using the Enzyme-Linked ImmunoSPOT assay, we examined peripheral blood mononuclear cells from HLA-A2+ cancer patients and healthy volunteers for reactivity against the CCL22-derived T-cell epitope. This revealed spontaneous T-cell responses against the CCL22-derived epitope in cancer patients and in healthy donors. Finally, we performed tetramer enrichment/depletion experiments to examine the impact of HLA-A2-restricted CCL22-specific T cells on CCL22 levels among PMBCs. The addition or activation of CCL22-specific T cells decreased the CCL22 level in the microenvironment. Activating CCL22-specific T cells (e.g., by vaccination) may directly target cancer cells and tumor-associated macrophages, thereby modulating Treg recruitment into the tumor environment and augmenting anticancer immunity.",
keywords = "anti-Tregs, Antigen, CCL22, T cells, Tregs",
author = "Evelina Martinenaite and {Munir Ahmad}, Shamaila and Morten Hansen and {\"O}zcan Met and Westergaard, {Marie Wulff} and Larsen, {Stine Kiaer} and Klausen, {Tobias Wirenfeldt} and Marco Donia and Svane, {Inge Marie} and Andersen, {Mads Hald}",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1080/2162402X.2016.1238541",
language = "English",
volume = "5",
journal = "OncoImmunology",
issn = "2162-4011",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - CCL22-specific T Cells

T2 - Modulating the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment

AU - Martinenaite, Evelina

AU - Munir Ahmad, Shamaila

AU - Hansen, Morten

AU - Met, Özcan

AU - Westergaard, Marie Wulff

AU - Larsen, Stine Kiaer

AU - Klausen, Tobias Wirenfeldt

AU - Donia, Marco

AU - Svane, Inge Marie

AU - Andersen, Mads Hald

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Tumor cells and tumor-infiltrating macrophages produce the chemokine CCL22, which attracts regulatory T cells (Tregs) into the tumor microenvironment, decreasing anticancer immunity. Here, we investigated the possibility of targeting CCL22-expressing cells by activating specific T cells. We analyzed the CCL22 protein signal sequence, identifying a human leukocyte antigen A2- (HLA-A2-) restricted peptide epitope, which we then used to stimulate peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PMBCs) to expand populations of CCL22-specific T cells in vitro. T cells recognizing an epitope derived from the signal-peptide of CCL22 will recognize CCL22-expressing cells even though CCL22 is secreted out of the cell. CCL22-specific T cells recognized and killed CCL22-expressing cancer cells. Furthermore, CCL22-specific T cells lysed acute monocytic leukemia cells in a CCL22 expression-dependent manner. Using the Enzyme-Linked ImmunoSPOT assay, we examined peripheral blood mononuclear cells from HLA-A2+ cancer patients and healthy volunteers for reactivity against the CCL22-derived T-cell epitope. This revealed spontaneous T-cell responses against the CCL22-derived epitope in cancer patients and in healthy donors. Finally, we performed tetramer enrichment/depletion experiments to examine the impact of HLA-A2-restricted CCL22-specific T cells on CCL22 levels among PMBCs. The addition or activation of CCL22-specific T cells decreased the CCL22 level in the microenvironment. Activating CCL22-specific T cells (e.g., by vaccination) may directly target cancer cells and tumor-associated macrophages, thereby modulating Treg recruitment into the tumor environment and augmenting anticancer immunity.

AB - Tumor cells and tumor-infiltrating macrophages produce the chemokine CCL22, which attracts regulatory T cells (Tregs) into the tumor microenvironment, decreasing anticancer immunity. Here, we investigated the possibility of targeting CCL22-expressing cells by activating specific T cells. We analyzed the CCL22 protein signal sequence, identifying a human leukocyte antigen A2- (HLA-A2-) restricted peptide epitope, which we then used to stimulate peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PMBCs) to expand populations of CCL22-specific T cells in vitro. T cells recognizing an epitope derived from the signal-peptide of CCL22 will recognize CCL22-expressing cells even though CCL22 is secreted out of the cell. CCL22-specific T cells recognized and killed CCL22-expressing cancer cells. Furthermore, CCL22-specific T cells lysed acute monocytic leukemia cells in a CCL22 expression-dependent manner. Using the Enzyme-Linked ImmunoSPOT assay, we examined peripheral blood mononuclear cells from HLA-A2+ cancer patients and healthy volunteers for reactivity against the CCL22-derived T-cell epitope. This revealed spontaneous T-cell responses against the CCL22-derived epitope in cancer patients and in healthy donors. Finally, we performed tetramer enrichment/depletion experiments to examine the impact of HLA-A2-restricted CCL22-specific T cells on CCL22 levels among PMBCs. The addition or activation of CCL22-specific T cells decreased the CCL22 level in the microenvironment. Activating CCL22-specific T cells (e.g., by vaccination) may directly target cancer cells and tumor-associated macrophages, thereby modulating Treg recruitment into the tumor environment and augmenting anticancer immunity.

KW - anti-Tregs

KW - Antigen

KW - CCL22

KW - T cells

KW - Tregs

U2 - 10.1080/2162402X.2016.1238541

DO - 10.1080/2162402X.2016.1238541

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 27999757

AN - SCOPUS:84998775092

VL - 5

JO - OncoImmunology

JF - OncoImmunology

SN - 2162-4011

IS - 11

M1 - e1238541

ER -

ID: 169964017