作者
Benedetta Apollonio,Filomena Spada,Nedyalko Petrov,Domenico Cozzetto,Despoina Papazoglou,Peter Jarvis,Shichina Kannambath,Manuela Terranova-Barberio,Rose‐Marie Amini,Gunilla Enblad,Charlotte Graham,Reuben Benjamin,Elizabeth H Phillips,Richard J. Ellis,Rosamond Nuamah,Mansoor Saqi,Dinis Pedro Calado,Richard Rosenquist,Lesley Ann Sutton,Jonathan R. Salisbury,Georgios Zacharioudakis,Anna Vardi,Patrick R. Hagner,Anita K. Gandhi,Marina Bacac,Christina Claus,Pablo Umaña,Ruth F. Jarrett,Christian Klein,Alexander Deutsch,Alan G. Ramsay
摘要
Recent transcriptomic-based analysis of diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) has highlighted the clinical relevance of lymph node (LN) fibroblast and tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) signatures within the tumor microenvironment (TME). However, the immunomodulatory role of fibroblasts in lymphoma remains unclear. Here, by studying human and mouse DLBCL-LNs, we identify the presence of an aberrantly remodeled fibroblastic reticular cell (FRC) network, expressing elevated fibroblast activated protein (FAP). RNA-sequencing analyses reveal that exposure to DLBCL reprograms key immunoregulatory pathways in FRCs, including a switch from homeostatic to inflammatory chemokine expression and elevated antigen presentation molecules. Functional assays show that DLBCL-activated FRCs (DLBCL-FRCs) hinder optimal TIL and chimeric antigen receptor T cell (CAR-T) migration. Moreover, DLBCL-FRCs inhibited CD8+ TIL cytotoxicity in an antigen-specific manner. Notably, the interrogation of patient LNs with imaging mass cytometry identified distinct environments differing in their CD8+ TIL-FRC composition and spatial organization that associated with survival outcomes. We further demonstrate the potential to target inhibitory FRCs to rejuvenate interacting TILs. Co-treating organotypic cultures with FAP-targeted immunostimulatory drugs and a bispecific antibody (glofitamab) augmented anti-lymphoma TIL cytotoxicity. Together, our study reveals an immunosuppressive role of FRCs in DLBCL, with implications for immune evasion, disease pathogenesis and optimizing immunotherapy for patients.