细胞毒性T细胞
生物
移植物抗宿主病
CD8型
免疫学
T细胞
癌症研究
免疫系统
细胞生物学
干细胞
分子生物学
遗传学
体外
作者
Ying Wang,Shan He,Gennaro Calendo,Tien D. Bui,Yuanyuan Tian,Che Young Lee,Yan Zhou,Xin Zhao,Ciril Abraham,Wenbin Mo,Mimi Chen,Ruqayyah sanders-Braggs,Jozef Madžo,Jean‐Pierre J. Issa,Elizabeth O. Hexner,David L. Wiest,Ran Reshef,Hai‐Hui Xue,Yi Zhang
出处
期刊:Blood
[American Society of Hematology]
日期:2023-10-23
卷期号:143 (2): 166-177
被引量:3
标识
DOI:10.1182/blood.2023021126
摘要
Abstract Persisting alloreactive donor T cells in target tissues are a determinant of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), but the transcriptional regulators that control the persistence and function of tissue-infiltrating T cells remain elusive. We demonstrate here that Id3, a DNA-binding inhibitor, is critical for sustaining T-cell responses in GVHD target tissues in mice, including the liver and intestine. Id3 loss results in aberrantly expressed PD-1 in polyfunctional T helper 1 (Th1) cells, decreased tissue-infiltrating PD-1+ polyfunctional Th1 cell numbers, impaired maintenance of liver TCF-1+ progenitor-like T cells, and inhibition of GVHD. PD-1 blockade restores the capacity of Id3-ablated donor T cells to mediate GVHD. Single-cell RNA-sequencing analysis revealed that Id3 loss leads to significantly decreased CD28- and PI3K/AKT-signaling activity in tissue-infiltrating polyfunctional Th1 cells, an indicator of active PD-1/PD-L1 effects. Id3 is also required for protecting CD8+ T cells from the PD-1 pathway–mediated suppression during GVHD. Genome-wide RNA-sequencing analysis reveals that Id3 represses transcription factors (e.g., Nfatc2, Fos, Jun, Ets1, and Prdm1) that are critical for PD-1 transcription, exuberant effector differentiation, and interferon responses and dysfunction of activated T cells. Id3 achieves these effects by restraining the chromatin accessibility for these transcription factors. Id3 ablation in donor T cells preserved their graft vs tumor effects in mice undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Furthermore, CRISPR/Cas9 knockout of ID3 in human CD19–directed chimeric antigen receptor T cells retained their antitumor activity in NOD/SCID/IL2Rg−/− mice early after administration. These findings identify that ID3 is an important target to reduce GVHD, and the gene-editing program of ID3 may have broad implications in T-cell–based immunotherapy.
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