Abstract
Melanoma and melanocytic nevi harbor shared lineage-specific antigens and oncogenic mutations. Yet, the relationship between the immune system and melanocytic nevi is unclear. Using a patient-derived xenograft (PDX) model, we found that 81.8% of the transplanted nevi underwent spontaneous regression, while peripheral skin remained intact. Nevus-resident CD4+ T helper 1 cells, which exhibited a massive clonal expansion to melanocyte-specific antigens, were responsible for nevus rejection. Boosting regulatory T cell suppressive function with low-dose exogenous human interleukin-2 injection or treatment with a human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II–blocking antibody prevented nevus rejection. Notably, mice with rejected nevus PDXs were protected from melanoma tumor growth. We detected a parallel CD4+ T cell–dominant immunity in clinically regressing melanocytic nevi. These findings reveal a mechanistic explanation for spontaneous nevus regression in humans and posit the activation of nevus-resident CD4+ effector T cells as a novel strategy for melanoma immunoprevention and treatment.
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CITATION STYLE
Schiferle, E. B., Cheon, S. Y., Ham, S., Son, H. G., Messerschmidt, J. L., Lawrence, D. P., … Demehri, S. (2021). Rejection of benign melanocytic nevi by nevus-resident CD4+ T cells. Science Advances, 7(26). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abg4498
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