作者
Fan Lin,Junwei Liu,Wei Hu,Zexin Chen,Jie Lan,Tongtong Zhang,Yang Zhang,Xianpeng Wu,Zhiwei Zhong,Danyang Zhang,Jinlong Zhang,Rui Qin,Hui Chen,Yunfeng Zong,Jianming Zhang,Bing Chen,Jun Jiang,Jifang Cheng,Jingyi Zhou,Zhiwei Gao,Zhenjie Liu,Ying Chai,Junqiang Fan,Pin Wu,Yinxuan Chen,Yuefeng Zhu,Kai Wang,Ying Yuan,Pintong Huang,Ying Zhang,Huiqin Feng,Kaichen Song,Xun Zeng,Wei Zhu,Xinyang Hu,Weiwei Yin,Wei Chen,Jianan Wang
摘要
Abstract Atherosclerosis (AS), a leading cause of cardio-cerebrovascular disease worldwide, is driven by the accumulation of lipid contents and chronic inflammation. Traditional strategies primarily focus on lipid reduction to control AS progression, leaving residual inflammatory risks for major adverse cardiovascular events (MACEs). While anti-inflammatory therapies targeting innate immunity have reduced MACEs, many patients continue to face significant risks. Another key component in AS progression is adaptive immunity, but its potential role in preventing AS remains unclear. To investigate this, we conducted a retrospective cohort study on tumor patients with AS plaques. We found that anti-programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) monoclonal antibody (mAb) significantly reduces AS plaque size. With multi-omics single-cell analyses, we comprehensively characterized AS plaque-specific PD-1 + T cells, which are activated and pro-inflammatory. We demonstrated that anti-PD-1 mAb, when captured by myeloid-expressed Fc gamma receptors (FcγRs), interacts with PD-1 expressed on T cells. This interaction turns the anti-PD-1 mAb into a substitute PD-1 ligand, suppressing T-cell functions in the PD-1 ligands-deficient context of AS plaques. Further, we conducted a prospective cohort study on tumor patients treated with anti-PD-1 mAb with or without FcγR-binding capability. Our analysis shows that anti-PD-1 mAb with FcγR-binding capability effectively reduces AS plaque size, while anti-PD-1 mAb without FcγR-binding capability does not. Our work suggests that T cell-targeting immunotherapy can be an effective strategy to resolve AS in humans.