作者
Hussein Sultan,Yoshiko Takeuchi,Jeffrey P. Ward,Naveen Sharma,Tiantian Liu,Vladimir Sukhov,Maria Firulyova,Yuang Song,Samuel Ameh,Simone Brioschi,Darya Khantakova,Cora D. Arthur,J. Michael White,Heather Kohlmiller,Andrés M. Salazar,Robert Burns,Helio A. Costa,Kelly D. Moynihan,Yik A. Yeung,Ivana M. Djuretic,Ton N. Schumacher,Kathleen C. F. Sheehan,Marco Colonna,James P. Allison,Kenneth M. Murphy,Maxim N. Artyomov,Robert D. Schreiber
摘要
Abstract CD4 + T cells can either enhance or inhibit tumour immunity. Although regulatory T cells have long been known to impede antitumour responses 1–5 , other CD4 + T cells have recently been implicated in inhibiting this response 6,7 . Yet, the nature and function of the latter remain unclear. Here, using vaccines containing MHC class I (MHC-I) neoantigens (neoAgs) and different doses of tumour-derived MHC-II neoAgs, we discovered that whereas the inclusion of vaccines with low doses of MHC-II-restricted peptides (LDVax) promoted tumour rejection, vaccines containing high doses of the same MHC-II neoAgs (HDVax) inhibited rejection. Characterization of the inhibitory cells induced by HDVax identified them as type 1 regulatory T (Tr1) cells expressing IL-10, granzyme B, perforin, CCL5 and LILRB4. Tumour-specific Tr1 cells suppressed tumour rejection induced by anti-PD1, LDVax or adoptively transferred tumour-specific effector T cells. Mechanistically, HDVax-induced Tr1 cells selectively killed MHC-II tumour antigen-presenting type 1 conventional dendritic cells (cDC1s), leading to low numbers of cDC1s in tumours. We then documented modalities to overcome this inhibition, specifically via anti-LILRB4 blockade, using a CD8-directed IL-2 mutein, or targeted loss of cDC2/monocytes. Collectively, these data show that cytotoxic Tr1 cells, which maintain peripheral tolerance, also inhibit antitumour responses and thereby function to impede immune control of cancer.