Abstract

The development and progression of solid tumors such as colorectal cancer (CRC) are known to be affected by the immune system and cell types such as T cells, natural killer (NK) cells, and natural killer T (NKT) cells are emerging as interesting targets for immunotherapy and clinical biomarker research. In addition, CD3+ and CD8+ T cell distribution in tumors has shown positive prognostic value in stage I–III CRC. Recent developments in digital computational pathology support not only classical cell density based tumor characterization, but also a more comprehensive analysis of the spatial cell organization in the tumor immune microenvironment (TiME). Leveraging that methodology in the current study, we tried to address the question of how the distribution of myeloid derived suppressor cells in TiME of primary CRC affects the function and location of cytotoxic T cells. We applied multicolored immunohistochemistry to identify monocytic (CD11b+CD14+) and granulocytic (CD11b+CD15+) myeloid cell populations together with proliferating and non-proliferating cytotoxic T cells (CD8+Ki67+/–). Through automated object detection and image registration using HALO software (IndicaLabs), we applied dedicated spatial statistics to measure the extent of overlap between the areas occupied by myeloid and T cells. With this approach, we observed distinct spatial organizational patterns of immune cells in tumors obtained from 74 treatment-naive CRC patients. Detailed analysis of inter-cell distances and myeloid-T cell spatial overlap combined with integrated gene expression data allowed to stratify patients irrespective of their mismatch repair (MMR) status or consensus molecular subgroups (CMS) classification. In addition, generation of cell distance-derived gene signatures and their mapping to the TCGA data set revealed associations between spatial immune cell distribution in TiME and certain subsets of CD8+ and CD4+ T cells. The presented study sheds a new light on myeloid and T cell interactions in TiME in CRC patients. Our results show that CRC tumors present distinct distribution patterns of not only T effector cells but also tumor resident myeloid cells, thus stressing the necessity of more comprehensive characterization of TiME in order to better predict cancer prognosis. This research emphasizes the importance of a multimodal approach by combining computational pathology with its detailed spatial statistics and gene expression profiling. Finally, our study presents a novel approach to cancer patients’ characterization that can potentially be used to develop new immunotherapy strategies, not based on classical biomarkers related to CRC biology.

Highlights

  • Used classification of colorectal cancer (CRC) tumors is based on classical pathological features such as tumor architecture, infiltration of bowel wall, and involvement of local lymph nodes assessed in the HE stained slides

  • We focused on analyzing the myeloid cell compartment in CRC primary tumor samples and its spatial relation to CD8+ T effector cells

  • When Microsatellite Instable (MSI) and MSS cases were compared, CD8+ T cell densities were significantly higher in MSI cases in all 3 regions of interest (ROI), i.e. tumor, invasive margin, and normal colon, whereas myeloid cells showed significantly higher accumulation only in tumor ROI

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Used classification of colorectal cancer (CRC) tumors is based on classical pathological features such as tumor architecture, infiltration of bowel wall, and involvement of local lymph nodes assessed in the HE stained slides. Since many of the CIT regiments target directly T effector cells [5, 6], ongoing research tries to address primarily T cell biology partially overlooking the importance of other immune cell types in shaping the tumor immune microenvironment (TiME). We address the question of how the distribution of certain types of MDSC in TiME of primary CRC impact the location and function of cytotoxic T cells. Our approach allowed to stratify CRC patients into 4 categories according to the level of overlap between myeloid and T cells irrespective of the MMR and CMS status. Categories with high levels of spatial overlap generally revealed down-regulation of cytotoxic T cell related pathways

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call