Abstract 188P
Background
Immune checkpoint inhibitors revolutionized treatment of both locally advanced and metastatic melanoma patients, yet some patients fail to achieve long-lasting benefit or progress on treatment, highlighting the need for new immune-modulatory agents. The co-stimulatory ligand OX40L and its receptor OX40 (also named TNFSF4/ TNFRSF4) were previously shown to elicit anti-tumor immune responses in pre-clinical cancer models. This led to several clinical trials of OX40-agonism as therapeutic interventions in cancer, which showed limited efficacy thus far. We previously analyzed RNA-sequencing data of OX40L expression in melanoma and found that low mRNA expression was associated with worse prognosis and with worse outcome following anti-PD1 treatment. These findings encouraged further studies to substantiate the role of OX40L in the melanoma microenvironment.
Methods
Multiplex immunofluorescent microscopy was used to evaluate the expression of OX40L/OX40 in FFPE surgical specimens of primary/metastatic melanoma tumors. Previously established cell-specific markers were used in parallel to identify OX40L- expressing cell phenotypes. Quantification was performed with GEN5 PRIME software.
Results
OX40L+ cells were detected in 15/16 tumors tested, in variable abundances, which correlated with the abundance of OX40+ cells and with co-localization events of OX40L+/OX40+ cells, suggesting functional OX40 ligand-receptor interactions. OX40L expression was frequently detected on Macrophages/Dentritic-cells, less on CD4+ or CD8+ T cells and rarely on melanoma cells. Unexpectedly, we now identified high prevalence of OX40L expression on Foxp3+ regulatory T cells (Treg), in addition to OX40, which was previously shown to antagonize their suppressive function.
Conclusions
Here we show that OX40L is abundantly expressed, together with OX40, on Treg within the melanoma micro-environment. These novel findings may suggest a role for OX40L in modulating Treg suppressive activity. If further proven, our observations may be important in prognostication and prediction of response in melanoma. Furthermore, they may point to new IO combinations for further research and have therapeutic implications towards ‘heating’ up tumors.
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
Israeli Cancer Association (ICA).
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
190P - Immune-related roles of B7H3 in glioblastoma
Presenter: Arnaud Simonet
Session: Poster Display
191P - Senolytic treatment remodels glioblastoma microenvironment
Presenter: Alexa Saliou
Session: Poster Display
192P - Analysis of Tumor-Associated Macrophages and Tumor-infiltrating Lymphocytes within the Tumor Microenvironment of Primary Tumors and Matched Brain Metastases
Presenter: Markus Kleinberger
Session: Poster Display
193P - Engagement of sialylated glycans with Siglec receptors on suppressive myeloid cells inhibit anti-cancer immunity via CCL2
Presenter: Ronja Wieboldt
Session: Poster Display
194P - Achieving Reproducible Maturation Staging of Tertiary Lymphoid Structures: from Imaging Mass Cytometry Data to Pathology Applications
Presenter: Marion Le Rochais
Session: Poster Display
195P - IMMUcan - Toward a better understanding of the tumor microenvironment to inform precision oncology approaches.
Presenter: Marie Morfouace
Session: Poster Display
196P - Local glycan engineering induces systemic antitumor immune reactions via antigen cross-presentation
Presenter: Natalia Rodrigues Mantuano
Session: Poster Display
197P - Computational pathology pipeline enables quantification of intratumor heterogeneity and tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte score
Presenter: Daniel Tiezzi
Session: Poster Display
198P - Polarization of tumor-associated macrophages enhanced by 2-HP-_-cyclodextrin modified PLGA nanoparticles
Presenter: HAO YUAN
Session: Poster Display
199P - Scalable multiplexed image analysis across cancer types as part of the IMMUcan consortium
Presenter: Nils Eling
Session: Poster Display