Chen Yao,Hong‐Wei Sun,Neal E. Lacey,Yun Ji,E. Ashley Moseman,Han‐Yu Shih,Elisabeth F. Heuston,Martha Kirby,Stacie M. Anderson,Jun Cheng,Omar Khan,Robin Handon,Julie Reilley,Jessica Fioravanti,Jinhui Hu,Selamawit Gossa,E. John Wherry,Luca Gattinoni,Dorian B. McGavern,John J. O’Shea,Pamela L. Schwartzberg,Tuoqi Wu
Progenitor-like CD8+ T cells mediate long-term immunity to chronic infection and cancer and respond potently to immune checkpoint blockade. These cells share transcriptional regulators with memory precursor cells, including T cell-specific transcription factor 1 (TCF1), but it is unclear whether they adopt distinct programs to adapt to the immunosuppressive environment. By comparing the single-cell transcriptomes and epigenetic profiles of CD8+ T cells responding to acute and chronic viral infections, we found that progenitor-like CD8+ T cells became distinct from memory precursor cells before the peak of the T cell response. We discovered a coexpression gene module containing Tox that exhibited higher transcriptional activity associated with more abundant active histone marks in progenitor-like cells than memory precursor cells. Moreover, thymocyte selection-associated high mobility group box protein TOX (TOX) promoted the persistence of antiviral CD8+ T cells and was required for the programming of progenitor-like CD8+ T cells. Thus, long-term CD8+ T cell immunity to chronic viral infection requires unique transcriptional and epigenetic programs associated with the transcription factor TOX. Long-lived, self-renewing ‘progenitor-like’ CD8+ T cells can arise during chronic viral infection or in cancer. Wu and colleagues identify the transcription factor TOX as essential to endow ‘stemness’ and long-term persistence in the face of chronic infection.