Abstract
Recent studies have implicated a role for adenosine-dependent immunosuppression in head and neck tumor microenvironments. We describe expression of CD73, an enzyme critical to the generation of adenosine from extracellular AMP, in T cells and other cell types within human head and neck tumors. Flow cytometric analyses of tumor-infiltrating cells indicate that CD3
cells are the predominant source of CD73 among immune infiltrating cells and that CD73 expression, especially among CD8
T cells, is inversely related to indices of T cell infiltration and T cell activation in the microenvironment of head and neck tumors. We provide evidence that CD73 expression on peripheral T cells and levels of soluble CD73 in circulation are correlated with CD73 expression on CD8
T cells in tumors. Moreover, fluorescent microscopy studies reveal that CD8
CD73
cells are observed in close proximity to tumor cells as well as in surrounding tissue. In vitro studies with peripheral blood T cells indicate that anti-CD3-stimulation causes loss of CD73 expression, especially among cells that undergo proliferation and that exogenous AMP can impair T cell proliferation, while sustaining CD73 expression. These data suggest that CD8
CD73
T cells may be especially important mediators of immunosuppression in human head and neck cancer.