作者
Pierre Tonnerre,David Wolski,Sonu Subudhi,Jihad Aljabban,Ruben C. Hoogeveen,Marcos Damasio,Hannah K. Drescher,Lea M. Bartsch,Damien C. Tully,Debattama R. Sen,David J. Bean,Joelle Brown,Almudena Torres-Cornejo,Maxwell Robidoux,Daniel Kvistad,Nadia Alatrakchi,Ang Cui,David J. Lieb,James A. Cheney,Jenna L. Gustafson,Lia Laura Lewis-Ximenez,Lucile Massenet-Regad,Thomas Eisenhaure,Jasneet Aneja,W. Nicholas Haining,Raymond T. Chung,Nir Hacohen,Todd M. Allen,Arthur Y. Kim,Georg M. Lauer
摘要
T cell exhaustion is associated with failure to clear chronic infections and malignant cells. Defining the molecular mechanisms of T cell exhaustion and reinvigoration is essential to improving immunotherapeutic modalities. Here we confirmed pervasive phenotypic, functional and transcriptional differences between memory and exhausted antigen-specific CD8+ T cells in human hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection before and after treatment. After viral cure, phenotypic changes in clonally stable exhausted T cell populations suggested differentiation toward a memory-like profile. However, functionally, the cells showed little improvement, and critical transcriptional regulators remained in the exhaustion state. Notably, T cells from chronic HCV infection that were exposed to antigen for less time because of viral escape mutations were functionally and transcriptionally more similar to memory T cells from spontaneously resolved HCV infection. Thus, the duration of T cell stimulation impacts exhaustion recovery, with antigen removal after long-term exhaustion being insufficient for the development of functional T cell memory. Lauer and colleagues examine CD8+ T cells following cure of human hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. CD8+ T cells exposed to chronic HCV-specific activation show durable functional, phenotypic and transcriptional exhaustion that is maintained even after antigen stimulus is removed.