| Literature DB >> 30971427 |
Paramita Chakraborty1, Shilpak Chatterjee1, Pravin Kesarwani1, Krishnamurthy Thyagarajan1, Supinya Iamsawat2, Annika Dalheim3, Hung Nguyen2, Shanmugam P Selvam4, Patrick Nasarre1, Gina Scurti3, Gary Hardiman5, Nilanjana Maulik6, Lauren Ball7, Vamsi Gangaraju4, Mark P Rubinstein1, Nancy Klauber-DeMore1, Elizabeth G Hill8, Besim Ogretmen4, Xue-Zhong Yu2, Michael I Nishimura3, Shikhar Mehrotra9.
Abstract
Adoptive transfer of tumor epitope-reactive T cells has emerged as a promising strategy to control tumor growth. However, chronically-stimulated T cells expanded for adoptive cell transfer are susceptible to cell death in an oxidative tumor microenvironment. Because oxidation of cell-surface thiols also alters protein functionality, we hypothesized that increasing the levels of thioredoxin (Trx), an antioxidant molecule facilitating reduction of proteins through cysteine thiol-disulfide exchange, in T cells will promote their sustained antitumor function. Using pre-melanosome protein (Pmel)-Trx1 transgenic mouse-derived splenic T cells, flow cytometry, and gene expression analysis, we observed here that higher Trx expression inversely correlated with reactive oxygen species and susceptibility to T-cell receptor restimulation or oxidation-mediated cell death. These Trx1-overexpressing T cells exhibited a cluster of differentiation 62Lhi (CD62Lhi) central memory-like phenotype with reduced glucose uptake (2-NBDGlo) and decreased effector function (interferon γlo). Furthermore, culturing tumor-reactive T cells in the presence of recombinant Trx increased the dependence of T cells on mitochondrial metabolism and improved tumor control. We conclude that strategies for increasing the antioxidant capacity of antitumor T cells modulate their immunometabolic phenotype leading to improved immunotherapeutic control of established tumors.Entities:
Keywords: T-cell; adoptive cell therapy; antioxidant; cell metabolism; cell-surface thiol; immunotherapy; melanoma; redox protein; thioredoxin
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30971427 PMCID: PMC6556575 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA118.006753
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157