Multilayered Immunity by Tissue-Resident Lymphocytes in Cancer

Annu Rev Immunol. 2024 Jun;42(1):647-677. doi: 10.1146/annurev-immunol-083122-043836. Epub 2024 Jun 14.

Abstract

Lymphocytes spanning the entire innate-adaptive spectrum can stably reside in tissues and constitute an integral component of the local defense network against immunological challenges. In tight interactions with the epithelium and endothelium, tissue-resident lymphocytes sense antigens and alarmins elicited by infectious microbes and abiotic stresses at barrier sites and mount effector responses to restore tissue homeostasis. Of note, such a host cell-directed immune defense system has been recently demonstrated to surveil epithelial cell transformation and carcinoma development, as well as cancer cell metastasis at selected distant organs, and thus represents a primordial cancer immune defense module. Here we review how distinct lineages of tissue-resident innate lymphoid cells, innate-like T cells, and adaptive T cells participate in a form of multilayered cancer immunity in murine models and patients, and how their convergent effector programs may be targeted through both shared and private regulatory pathways for cancer immunotherapy.

Keywords: adaptive T cells; carcinoma; immunosurveillance; innate lymphoid cells; innate-like T cells; tissue residence.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Adaptive Immunity
  • Animals
  • Humans
  • Immunity, Innate*
  • Immunotherapy / methods
  • Lymphocytes / immunology
  • Lymphocytes / metabolism
  • Neoplasms* / immunology
  • Neoplasms* / therapy
  • Tumor Microenvironment / immunology