A Retinoic Acid—Rich Tumor Microenvironment Provides Clonal Survival Cues for Tumor-Specific CD8+ T Cells

Y Guo, K Pino-Lagos, CA Ahonen, KA Bennett, J Wang… - Cancer research, 2012 - AACR
Y Guo, K Pino-Lagos, CA Ahonen, KA Bennett, J Wang, JL Napoli, R Blomhoff…
Cancer research, 2012AACR
While vitamin A has been implicated in host resistance to infectious disease, little is known
about the role of vitamin A and its active metabolite, retinoic acid (RA) in host defenses
against cancer. Here, we show that local RA production within the tumor microenvironment
(TME) is increased up to 5-fold as compared with naïve surrounding tissue, with a
commensurate increase in RA signaling to regionally infiltrating tumor-reactive T cells.
Conditional disruption of RA signaling in CD8+ T cells using a dominant negative retinoic …
Abstract
While vitamin A has been implicated in host resistance to infectious disease, little is known about the role of vitamin A and its active metabolite, retinoic acid (RA) in host defenses against cancer. Here, we show that local RA production within the tumor microenvironment (TME) is increased up to 5-fold as compared with naïve surrounding tissue, with a commensurate increase in RA signaling to regionally infiltrating tumor-reactive T cells. Conditional disruption of RA signaling in CD8+ T cells using a dominant negative retinoic acid receptor α (dnRARα) established that RA signaling is required for tumor-specific CD8+ T-cell expansion/accumulation and protective antitumor immunity. In vivo analysis of antigen-specific CD8+ T-cell responses revealed that early T-cell expansion was RA-independent; however, late T-cell expansion and clonal accumulation was suppressed strongly in the absence of RA signaling. Our findings indicate that RA function is essential for the survival of tumor-reactive CD8+ T cells within the TME. Cancer Res; 72(20); 5230–9. ©2012 AACR.
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