Chang Liu,Ashwin Somasundaram,Sasikanth Manne,Angela M. Gocher,Andrea L. Szymczak-Workman,Kate M. Vignali,Ellen Scott,Daniel P. Normolle,E. John Wherry,Evan J. Lipson,Robert L. Ferris,Tullia C. Bruno,Creg J. Workman,Dario A.A. Vignali
Robust CD8+ T cell memory is essential for long-term protective immunity but is often compromised in cancer, where T cell exhaustion leads to loss of memory precursors. Immunotherapy via checkpoint blockade may not effectively reverse this defect, potentially underlying disease relapse. Here we report that mice with a CD8+ T cell–restricted neuropilin-1 (NRP1) deletion exhibited substantially enhanced protection from tumor rechallenge and sensitivity to anti-PD1 immunotherapy, despite unchanged primary tumor growth. Mechanistically, NRP1 cell-intrinsically limited the self-renewal of the CD44+PD1+TCF1+TIM3− progenitor exhausted T cells, which was associated with their reduced ability to induce c-Jun/AP-1 expression on T cell receptor restimulation, a mechanism that may contribute to terminal T cell exhaustion at the cost of memory differentiation in wild-type tumor-bearing hosts. These data indicate that blockade of NRP1, a unique ‘immune memory checkpoint’, may promote the development of long-lived tumor-specific Tmem that are essential for durable antitumor immunity. T cell exhaustion limits antitumor immune responses. Vignali and colleagues identify neuropilin-1 as a novel immune checkpoint that cell-intrinsically operates to limit memory cell formation and can be targeted to enhance antitumor responses.