| Literature DB >> 32123114 |
Dalton Hermans1, Sanjivan Gautam2, Juan C García-Cañaveras3,4, Daniel Gromer1, Suman Mitra1, Rosanne Spolski1, Peng Li1, Stephen Christensen1, Rosa Nguyen1, Jian-Xin Lin1, Jangsuk Oh1, Ning Du1, Sharon Veenbergen1, Jessica Fioravanti2, Risa Ebina-Shibuya1, Christopher Bleck5, Leonard M Neckers6, Joshua D Rabinowitz3,4, Luca Gattinoni7,8, Warren J Leonard9.
Abstract
Interleukin (IL)-2 and IL-21 dichotomously shape CD8+ T cell differentiation. IL-2 drives terminal differentiation, generating cells that are poorly effective against tumors, whereas IL-21 promotes stem cell memory T cells (TSCM) and antitumor responses. Here we investigated the role of metabolic programming in the developmental differences induced by these cytokines. IL-2 promoted effector-like metabolism and aerobic glycolysis, robustly inducing lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and lactate production, whereas IL-21 maintained a metabolically quiescent state dependent on oxidative phosphorylation. LDH inhibition rewired IL-2-induced effects, promoting pyruvate entry into the tricarboxylic acid cycle and inhibiting terminal effector and exhaustion programs, including mRNA expression of members of the NR4A family of nuclear receptors, as well as Prdm1 and Xbp1 While deletion of Ldha prevented development of cells with antitumor effector function, transient LDH inhibition enhanced the generation of memory cells capable of triggering robust antitumor responses after adoptive transfer. LDH inhibition did not significantly affect IL-21-induced metabolism but caused major transcriptomic changes, including the suppression of IL-21-induced exhaustion markers LAG3, PD1, 2B4, and TIM3. LDH inhibition combined with IL-21 increased the formation of TSCM cells, resulting in more profound antitumor responses and prolonged host survival. These findings indicate a pivotal role for LDH in modulating cytokine-mediated T cell differentiation and underscore the therapeutic potential of transiently inhibiting LDH during adoptive T cell-based immunotherapy, with an unanticipated cooperative antitumor effect of LDH inhibition and IL-21.Entities:
Keywords: IL-2; IL-21; LDH; adoptive immunotherapy; immunometabolism
Year: 2020 PMID: 32123114 PMCID: PMC7084161 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1920413117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205