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Browsing by Author "Jones, Tamara"

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    Aging- and Tumor-Mediated Increase in CD8+CD28- T Cells Might Impose a Strong Barrier to Success of Immunotherapy in Glioblastoma
    (American Association of Immunologists, 2021-06-08) Huff, Wei X.; Bam, Marpe; Shireman, Jack M.; Kwon, Jae Hyun; Song, Leo; Newman, Sharlé; Cohen-Gadol, Aaron A.; Shapiro, Scott; Jones, Tamara; Fulton, Kelsey; Liu, Sheng; Tanaka, Hiromi; Liu, Yunlong; Wan, Jun; Dey, Mahua; Neurological Surgery, School of Medicine
    Clinical use of various forms of immunotherapeutic drugs in glioblastoma (GBM), has highlighted severe T-cell dysfunction such as exhaustion in GBM patients. However, reversing T-cell exhaustion using immune checkpoint inhibitors in GBM clinical trials has not shown significant overall survival benefit. Phenotypically, CD8+ T cells with downregulated CD28 co-receptors, low CD27 expression, increased CD57 expression, and telomere shortening, are classified as senescent T cells. These senescent T cells are normally seen as part of aging and also in many forms of solid cancers. Absence of CD28 on T-cells leads to several functional irregularities including reduced TCR diversity, incomplete activation of T cells, and defects in antigen induced proliferation. In the context of GBM, presence and/or function of these CD8+CD28− T-cells is unknown. In this clinical correlative study, we investigated the effect of aging as well as tumor microenvironment on CD8+ T-cell phenotype as an indicator of its function in GBM patients. We systematically analyzed and describe a large population of CD8+CD28− T-cells in both the blood and tumor infiltrating lymphocytes of GBM patients. We found that phenotypically these CD8+CD28− T-cells represent a distinct population compared to exhausted T-cells. Comparative transcriptomic and pathway analysis of CD8+CD28− T cell populations in GBM patients revealed that tumor microenvironment might be influencing several immune related pathways and thus further exaggerating the age associated immune dysfunction in this patient population.
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