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Data from γδ T Cells Support Antigen-Specific αβ T cell–Mediated Antitumor Responses during BCG Treatment for Bladder Cancer

Authors :
Robert S. Svatek
Tyler J. Curiel
Jonathan A. Gelfond
David J. McConkey
Joshua J. Meeks
Ryan M. Reyes
Zhen-Ju Shu
Neelam Mukherjee
Niannian Ji
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) is the most effective intravesical agent at reducing recurrence for patients with high-grade, non–muscle-invasive bladder cancer. Nevertheless, response to BCG is variable and strategies to boost BCG efficacy have not materialized. Prior work demonstrated a requirement for either conventional αβ or nonconventional γδ T cells in mediating BCG treatment efficacy, yet the importance of T-cell antigen specificity for BCG's treatment effect is unclear. Here, we provide direct evidence to show that BCG increases the number of tumor antigen–specific αβ T cells in patients with bladder cancer and protects mice from subsequent same-tumor challenge, supporting BCG induction of tumor-specific memory and protection. Adoptive T-cell transfers of antigen-specific αβ T cells into immunodeficient mice challenged with syngeneic MB49 bladder tumors showed that both tumor and BCG antigen–specific αβ T cells contributed to BCG efficacy. BCG-specific antitumor immunity, however, also required nonconventional γδ T cells. Prior work shows that the mTOR inhibitor rapamycin induces the proliferation and effector function of γδ T cells. Here, rapamycin increased BCG efficacy against both mouse and human bladder cancer in vivo in a γδ T cell–dependent manner. Thus, γδ T cells augment antitumor adaptive immune effects of BCG and support rapamycin as a promising approach to boost BCG efficacy in the treatment of non–muscle-invasive bladder cancer.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....398ef09ca540566bd7183bee88f85daa
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/2326-6066.c.6550607.v1