Current spatial T cell receptor (TCR) profiling approaches lack the resolution needed to link clonal identity, transcriptional state, and spatial positioning of individual T cells in the tumor microenvironment. Here, we introduce a spatial TCR profiling strategy that resolves individual T cell clones together with their transcriptional states at single-cell resolution and applied the method to human head and neck squamous cell carcinoma. Presumed tumor-specific T cells were broadly dispersed throughout the tumor microenvironment, and cells of the same clone occupied distinct transcriptional states in different locations: Immune-rich regions contained more plastic or progenitor cells, whereas tumor-dense regions were enriched for exhausted states. Patients exhibited notably different spatial architectures of antitumor T cell responses, revealing variation that was not captured by high-resolution, spatially agnostic methods such as spectral flow cytometry and single-cell RNA sequencing. These results provide a blueprint for dissecting antigen-specific T cell states in human tumors and reveal how T cell states are spatially coordinated with local cues across the tumor microenvironment.
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McCord et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69db375f4fe01fead37c54da — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/sciimmunol.aec3133
Kelli A. McCord
Baylor College of Medicine
Emerald Kan
Baylor College of Medicine
Sean Hyslop
Baylor College of Medicine
Science Immunology
Baylor College of Medicine
Mayo Clinic in Arizona
The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center
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