Mapping the immune landscape in small cell lung cancer unveils a distinct tumor-reactive CD8+ T cell molecular signature

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Abstract

Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) is a highly aggressive malignancy with limited therapeutic advances. Unlike many other cancers, its immune landscape, particularly immune competence and T cell recognition, remains poorly characterized. Here, we generate a single-cell transcriptome atlas of the SCLC immune microenvironment with paired T cell receptor (TCR) sequencing. By linking T cell states with clonality and a multilayered functional screening, we identify 6 tumor-reactive TCRs that recognize and eradicate autologous SCLC cell lines. We delineate a novel SCLC-reactive CD8+ T cell signature (SCLC_TR), enabling the identification of 47 further SCLC-reactive TCRs. The SCLC_TR signature performs extremely well in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), another immune-cold tumor indication, and, most strikingly, patients with elevated SCLC_TR signature scores exhibited significantly improved survival, underlining its prognostic potential. Comparative cell-cell interaction analyses implicate several immunosuppressive mechanisms, with myeloid cells and CD4⁺ regulatory T cells possibly acting as counterbalances to effector T cell activity in SCLC. In summary, our study challenges the prevailing notion of SCLC as an immune-cold tumor type by providing direct evidence of tumor-reactive T cell responses and introduces the SCLC_TR signature as a tool to identify tumor-specific T cells and their microenvironmental restraints and escape mechanisms, ultimately shaping next-generation immunotherapeutic strategies.

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