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Evaluating immunotherapeutic outcomes in triple-negative breast cancer with a cholesterol radiotracer in mice
Nicholas G. Ciavattone, Nan Guan, Alex Farfel, Jenelle Stauff, Timothy Desmond, Benjamin L. Viglianti, Peter J.H. Scott, Allen F. Brooks, Gary D. Luker
Nicholas G. Ciavattone, Nan Guan, Alex Farfel, Jenelle Stauff, Timothy Desmond, Benjamin L. Viglianti, Peter J.H. Scott, Allen F. Brooks, Gary D. Luker
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Resource and Technical Advance Immunology Oncology

Evaluating immunotherapeutic outcomes in triple-negative breast cancer with a cholesterol radiotracer in mice

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Abstract

Evaluating the response to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) remains an unmet challenge in triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). The requirement for cholesterol in the activation and function of T cells led us to hypothesize that quantifying cellular accumulation of this molecule could distinguish successful from ineffective checkpoint immunotherapy. To analyze accumulation of cholesterol by T cells in the immune microenvironment of breast cancer, we leveraged the PET radiotracer, eFNP-59. eFNP-59 is an analog of cholesterol that our group validated as an imaging biomarker for cholesterol uptake in preclinical models and initial human studies. In immunocompetent mouse models of TNBC, we found that elevated uptake of exogenous labeled cholesterol analogs functions as a marker for T cell activation. When comparing ICI-responsive and -nonresponsive tumors directly, uptake of fluorescent cholesterol and eFNP-59 increased in T cells from ICI-responsive tumors. We discovered that accumulation of cholesterol by T cells increased in ICI-responding tumors that received anti–PD-1 checkpoint immunotherapy. In patients with TNBC, tumors containing cycling T cells had features of cholesterol uptake and trafficking within those populations. These results suggest that uptake of exogenous cholesterol analogs by tumor-infiltrating T cells allows detection of T cell activation and has potential to assess the success of ICI therapy.

Authors

Nicholas G. Ciavattone, Nan Guan, Alex Farfel, Jenelle Stauff, Timothy Desmond, Benjamin L. Viglianti, Peter J.H. Scott, Allen F. Brooks, Gary D. Luker

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Figure 3

T cells in ICI-responsive EO771 tumors show greater uptake of fluorescent cholesterol in vivo.

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T cells in ICI-responsive EO771 tumors show greater uptake of fluorescen...
We injected C57BL/6J mice intraperitoneally with cholesterol labeled with BODIPY and euthanized animals 24 hours later to collect and dissociate tumors for flow cytometry (n = 5 each for EO771 and AT-3). Plots for (A) CD8+ and (B) CD4+ T cells show accumulation of BODIPY-cholesterol in cells from individual tumors from EO771 and AT-3 tumors relative to vehicle only or isotype antibody control. (C) CD8+ and (D) CD4+ T cells in EO771 tumors showed significantly higher fold change accumulation of fluorescent cholesterol relative to FMO control. (E) CD8+, but not (F) CD4+, T cells in EO771 tumors also expressed higher levels of PD-1. **P < 0.01,***P < 0.001, ****P < 0.0001 for differences between means using nonparametric Mann-Whitney tests (C and D; n = 5 mice per group), while differences between T cell population percentages were assessed using 2-tailed Student’s t test (E and F).

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