Evidence of Antigen presentation in TDLN |
Chamoto et al. (2006)
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Th-1 cell therapy in an OVA-expressing tumour murine model. |
APC travel to TDLN presenting tumour antigen, resulting in tumour specific Th1 cell proliferation, immune infiltration and tumour regression. |
Marzo et al. (1999)
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HA specific CD8+ T cell adoptive transfer in a murine HA-expressing tumour model. |
Tumour antigen stimulates expansion of T cells in TDLN throughout tumour growth. |
Hargadon et al. (2006)
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Evaluation of antigen presentation and CD8+ T cell function in an OVA-expressing melanoma tumour murine model. |
Tumour derived antigen can be cross-presented by APCs or directly presented by tumour cells to naïve T cells in TDLN, and this induces CD8+ T cell differentiation. |
Dammeijer et al. (2020)
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Assessment of TDLN in murine tumour (mesothelioma, melanoma, pancreatic and colon adenocarcinoma) models following TDLN-targeted PD-L1 blockade, correlated with PD-1/PD-L1 interactions in TDLN of non-metastatic melanoma patients (see below). |
TDLNs contain tumour specific PD-1+ T cells co-localising with PD-L1 expressing myeloid cells, including cDCs. Selective targeting of PD-L1 TDLN-resident T cells affects a systemic anti-tumour immune response and tumour control. |
Salmon et al. (2016)
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Assessment of immune cell subsets in a murine melanoma model following PD-L1 blockade. |
CD103+ DCs, presenting tumour antigen in the TDLN were able to promote tumour specific antigen mediated T cell activation and proliferation. Expansion of CD103+ DCs following poly I:C administration enhanced tumour response to BRAF or PD-L1 blockade. |
Tumour specific T cell activation and proliferation |
Fransen et al. (2018)
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Murine models of colon adenocarcinoma treated with anti-PD-1 and PD-L1 therapy. |
TDLNs, but not non-draining LNs, contained CD11b+ myeloid cells with higher levels of PD-L1 expression and increased numbers and activation of CD8+ T cells after anti-PD-1 therapy. Surgical resection of TDLN and inhibition of lymphocyte trafficking from LN abolished therapy induced tumour responses. |
Principe et al. (2020)
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Murine tumour models (mesothelioma, renal cell carcinoma) were treated with anti-CTLA-4 and anti-PD-L1 therapy then tumours and TDLN assessed for immune cell infiltration and profiling. |
ICI therapy increased the proliferation of antigen-specific cytotoxic T cells with an effector memory phenotype both in the tumour and TDLN, and correlated with ICI response. |
Chamoto et al. (2017)
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Murine tumour models (colon adenocarcinoma, lung carcinoma and fibrosarcoma) treated with anti-PD-L1 and targeted therapies. |
Resection of TDLNs prior to tumour implantation and/or prior to anti-PD-1 treatment completely abolished or reduced efficacy respectively. CTLs in TDLNs express other targets (e.g. MTOR) which can be drugged to provide synergistic responses with anti-PD-1 therapy. |
Liu et al. (2016)
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Murine models of breast cancer treated with neoadjuvant or adjuvant immunotherapy. |
Neoadjuvant immunotherapy gave greater therapeutic efficacy compared with adjuvant treatment, and correlated with sustained peripheral anti-tumour immune responses. |
Migration of immune cell populations from TDLN to the TME |
Spitzer et al. (2017)
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Murine breast cancer model treated with anti-PD-1 therapy and other immunotherapies. Immune cell responses were analysed from multiple tissues using mass cytometry. Results were correlated with melanoma patients responding to immunotherapy. |
T reg, CD8+ T cells and CD4+ effector memory T cells had significantly increased proliferation demonstrating the initiation of a T cell-mediated immune response within the TDLN. In addition, memory T cells were able to activate naïve T cells in the TDLN for a sustained immune response. This CD4+ T cell subset was also found in the peripheral blood of patients with melanoma responding to anti-CTLA-4 + GM-CSF therapy. |
Fransen et al. (2018)
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Murine models of colon adenocarcinoma treated with anti-PD-1 and PD-L1 therapy. |
The inhibition of trafficking of T cells from the TDLN decreased T cell numbers in peripheral circulation and correlated with reduced efficacy of anti-PD-1 treatment. In addition, when TDLN were removed prior to therapy with anti-PD-1, the number of CD8+ T cells in the TME was reduced. |
Immune tolerance in the TDLN |
Watanabe et al. (2008)
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Murine fibrosarcoma model receiving adoptive cell transfer with MDSCs from tumour bearing mice or normal splenocytes and stimulated with inoculation of tumour cells. |
Immunosuppressive MDSCs have been isolated in TDLN and shown to dampen anti-tumour T cell responses, reducing T cell activation and CD4+/CD8+ T cell numbers but not T cell effector function. |
Huang et al. (2017)
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Assessment of TDLN in a murine breast carcinoma model. |
TGF-beta secreting Tregs within TDLNs suppress tumour specific CD8+ T cell cytotoxic activity, resulting in tumour growth. Surgical resection of TDLN reduced distant metastasis. |
Alonso et al., (2018)
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Assessment of TDLN in a murine lung adenocarcinoma model. |
In early tumour development, CD4+ T cells are driven to differentiate as Tregs rather that effector CD4+ T cells in the TDLN, promoting suppressive Treg responses that mimic peripheral self-tolerance to tumour antigen. |
Clinical studies |
Study |
Tumour type |
Conclusions |
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Kohrt et al. (2005)
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Assessment of sentinel and axillary lymph nodes in breast cancer patients. |
Presence of CD4+ T cells and DCs in TDLN correlate with disease free survival. |
Nunez et al. (2020)
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Assessment of tumour invaded and non-invaded TDLNs in breast cancer patients. |
T reg cells traffic from cancer TDLN to the TME. |
Sluijter et al. (2015)
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Melanoma tumour and sentinel lymph node assessment following randomised trial of intradermal CpG-B/GM-CSF. |
The human equivalent CD141+ CLEC-9A+ DCs have been found in TDLNs and were responsible for the cross presentation and activation of anti-tumour T cells in melanoma patients. |
Dammeijer et al. (2020)
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PD-1/PD-L1 interactions in TDLN of non-metastatic (stage II) melanoma patients, correlated with findings in TDLN in murine tumour models following TDLN-targeted PD-L1 blockade (see above). |
PD-1/PD-L1-interactions in TDLNs of non-metastatic melanoma patients, but not in the corresponding primary tumours, are associated with early distant disease recurrence. |
Kamphorst et al. (2017)
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Assessment of peripheral blood from NSCLC patients following anti-PD-1 therapy, correlated with in vivo findings following anti-PD-1 therapy in a murine model of colon carcinoma. |
CD28/B7 mediated proliferation of CD8+ T cells is required for anti-tumour efficacy and occurs in TDLNs. |
van de Ven et al. (2017)
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Assessment of endobronchial fine needle aspirates from TDLN in NSCLC patients. |
TDLN has a greater number of tumour-antigen experienced immune cells and specific activated T cell subsets than peripheral blood sampling. |
Shariati et al. (2020)
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Assessment of TDLN in breast cancer patients. |
CD86+ B cells in TDLN were associated with higher tumour grade and a greater number of metastatic lymph nodes. Expression of PD-1 and CD39 on B cells in LNs correlated with higher grade and larger tumours respectively. Patients with CD73+ B cells had fewer involved lymph nodes. |
DeFalco et al. (2018)
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Assessment of peripheral blood samples from metastatic melanoma, renal cell carcinoma and lung adenocarcinoma patients. |
High levels of blood plasmablasts were found in patients with stable metastatic disease, suggesting that B cell responses may be important for tumour control. |