Progress beyond state-of-the-art and expected impact
A direct assessment of the heterogeneity in the ability of distinct cancer subclones to escape immune predation has, to the best of our knowledge, not been performed previously. We were able to generate patient-derived functional models from individual cancer clones, that can be co-cultured with autologous immune cells. This allowed moving beyond descriptive data and provided direct evidence that cancer subclones show intrinsic differences in their ability to elicit a productive T-cell response. Current work is aimed at identifying the specific mechanism underlying subclonal immune escape, and the generalisability in a wider patient cohort, to determine the potential for therapeutic targeting. Moreover, we anticipate that a better understanding of how clonal heterogeneity contributes to immune escape will drive the design of more rational (combination) immunotherapies aimed at targeting subclonal resistance.
Exploitation and dissemination
Insights driven in part by work from this project have led to the publication of two review articles:
- Hughes T, Dijkstra KK, Rawlins EL & Hynds R. Open questions in human lung organoid research. Front Pharmacol. 2022;13:1083017.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9880211/(odnośnik otworzy się w nowym oknie)- Dijkstra KK, Wu Y & Swanton C. The impact of clonal heterogeneity on cancer immunosurveillance. Ann Rev Cancer Biol 2023;7:131-47.
Final publication date April 7 2023.
A primary research paper is in preparation and will be submitted to an open-access peer-reviewed scientific journal.
This work has been presented at the Cancer Research UK Cancer Evolution symposium, the Crick postdoc symposium, and the annual meeting of the American Association of Cancer Resarch. Abstracts have been submitted to the annual conference of the European Association of Cancer Resarch (EACR) and the EACR’s immune-oncology conference in May and June 2023, respectively.
During this project, talks for lay audiences have been given at the Crick’s ‘Outwitting Cancer’ exhibition and ‘Pint of Science’.