| Literature DB >> 36171288 |
Masao Hashimoto1,2, Koichi Araki1,2,3,4, Maria A Cardenas5, Peng Li6, Rohit R Jadhav7,8, Haydn T Kissick1,2,5,9, William H Hudson1,2, Donald J McGuire1,2, Rebecca C Obeng1,2,10,11, Andreas Wieland1,2,12,13, Judong Lee1,2, Daniel T McManus1,2, James L Ross1,2, Se Jin Im1,2,14, Junghwa Lee1,2,15, Jian-Xin Lin6, Bin Hu8, Erin E West6,16, Christopher D Scharer2, Gordon J Freeman17,18, Arlene H Sharpe19,20, Suresh S Ramalingam9,21, Alex Pellerin22, Volker Teichgräber23, William J Greenleaf24, Christian Klein25, Jorg J Goronzy7,8, Pablo Umaña25, Warren J Leonard6, Kendall A Smith26, Rafi Ahmed27,28,29.
Abstract
Combination therapy with PD-1 blockade and IL-2 is highly effective during chronic lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus infection1. Here we examine the underlying basis for this synergy. We show that PD-1 + IL-2 combination therapy, in contrast to PD-1 monotherapy, substantially changes the differentiation program of the PD-1+TCF1+ stem-like CD8+ T cells and results in the generation of transcriptionally and epigenetically distinct effector CD8+ T cells that resemble highly functional effector CD8+ T cells seen after an acute viral infection. The generation of these qualitatively superior CD8+ T cells that mediate viral control underlies the synergy between PD-1 and IL-2. Our results show that the PD-1+TCF1+ stem-like CD8+ T cells, also referred to as precursors of exhausted CD8+ T cells, are not fate-locked into the exhaustion program and their differentiation trajectory can be changed by IL-2 signals. These virus-specific effector CD8+ T cells emerging from the stem-like CD8+ T cells after combination therapy expressed increased levels of the high-affinity IL-2 trimeric (CD25-CD122-CD132) receptor. This was not seen after PD-1 blockade alone. Finally, we show that CD25 engagement with IL-2 has an important role in the observed synergy between IL-2 cytokine and PD-1 blockade. Either blocking CD25 with an antibody or using a mutated version of IL-2 that does not bind to CD25 but still binds to CD122 and CD132 almost completely abrogated the synergistic effects observed after PD-1 + IL-2 combination therapy. There is considerable interest in PD-1 + IL-2 combination therapy for patients with cancer2,3, and our fundamental studies defining the underlying mechanisms of how IL-2 synergizes with PD-1 blockade should inform these human translational studies.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36171288 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05257-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 69.504