Solid tumors often develop dense, fibrous tissue and other hostile conditions that prevent immune cells, especially T lymphocytes, from effectively entering and attacking the cancer. This lack of T cell “infiltration” is widely recognized as a major barrier to immunotherapy success in numerous cancers, including pancreatic cancer. To address this challenge, the DRILL project set out to systematically uncover the molecular factors, both within the tumor microenvironment and inside T cells themselves, that influence how well T cells move into and function within solid tumors. By deciphering these mechanisms, we aim to help design better immunotherapies that enable T cells to reach and destroy tumor cells more efficiently.
This research combines cutting-edge methods in genetics, cell biology, and immunology to identify promising new targets for intervention, whether that is by altering the factors in the tumor microenvironment to draw T cells inward and maintain their functions or engineering T cells to improve their mobility. Ultimately, our goal is to overcome a key limitation in existing immunotherapies and thus improve patient outcomes in immunotherapies. Should these strategies prove successful, their impact could be very significant, potentially transforming the way solid tumors are approached by enabling truly potent T cell responses in cancers.