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Human Tumor-Infiltrating MAIT Cells Display Hallmarks of Bacterial Antigen Recognition in Colorectal Cancer

Authors :
Naisi Li
Yannick Simoni
Bernett Lee
Etienne Becht
Iain Beehuat Tan
Andrew Nguyen
Teck Por Lim
Daniel M. Lachance
Emile Kwong Wei Tan
Julia D. Berkson
Neelendu Dey
Justin Golovato
Ronnie Mathew
Martin Prlic
Niranjan Nagarajan
Si-Lin Koo
Chiew Yee Loh
Shamin Li
Samuel S. Minot
Daniel S.W. Tan
Evan W. Newell
Source :
Cell Reports Medicine, Vol 1, Iss 3, Pp 100039-(2020), Cell Reports Medicine
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2020.

Abstract

Summary Growing evidence indicates a role for the gut microbiota in modulating anti-tumor treatment efficacy in human cancer. Here we study mucosa-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells to look for evidence of bacterial antigen recognition in human colon, lung, and kidney carcinomas. Using mass cytometry and single-cell mRNA sequencing, we identify a tumor-infiltrating MAIT cell subset expressing CD4 and Foxp3 and observe high expression of CD39 on MAIT cells from colorectal cancer (CRC) only, which we show in vitro to be expressed specifically after TCR stimulation. We further reveal that these cells are phenotypically and functionally exhausted. Sequencing data show high bacterial infiltration in CRC tumors and highlight an enriched species, Fusobacteria nucleatum, with capability to activate MAIT cells in a TCR-dependent way. Our results provide evidence of a MAIT cell response to microbial antigens in CRC and could pave the way for manipulating MAIT cells or the microbiome for cancer therapy.<br />Graphical Abstract<br />Highlights Comprehensive profiling of tumor-infiltrating MAIT cells in colorectal cancer (CRC) Identification of a tumor-infiltrating MAIT cell subset expressing CD4 and Foxp3 TCR-driven CD39 expression is enriched in tumor-infiltrating MAIT cells CRC-related Fusobacterium nucleatum can activate MAIT cells in a TCR-dependent way<br />By investigating human colon, lung, and kidney carcinomas, Li et al. propose MAIT cells as part of the missing link between the gut microbiota and tumor biology. This work will open new avenues in cancer therapy by manipulating MAIT cells or MAIT-related bacterial ligands in the context of microbiota-influenced cancers.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26663791
Volume :
1
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell Reports Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7c83fc663952372e0c04c3c972d3ac49