Proliferating Transitory T Cells with an Effector-like Transcriptional Signature Emerge from PD-1+ Stem-like CD8+ T Cells during Chronic Infection.

Journal: Immunity
Published:
Abstract

T cell dysfunction is a characteristic feature of chronic viral infection and cancer. Recent studies in chronic lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) infection have defined a PD-1+ Tcf-1+ CD8+ T cell subset capable of self-renewal and differentiation into more terminally differentiated cells that downregulate Tcf-1 and express additional inhibitory molecules such as Tim3. Here, we demonstrated that expression of the glycoprotein CD101 divides this terminally differentiated population into two subsets. Stem-like Tcf-1+ CD8+ T cells initially differentiated into a transitory population of CD101-Tim3+ cells that later converted into CD101+ Tim3+ cells. Recently generated CD101-Tim3+ cells proliferated in vivo, contributed to viral control, and were marked by an effector-like transcriptional signature including expression of the chemokine receptor CX3CR1, pro-inflammatory cytokines, and granzyme B. PD-1 pathway blockade increased the numbers of CD101-Tim3+ CD8+ T cells, suggesting that these newly generated transitional cells play a critical role in PD-1-based immunotherapy.

Authors
William Hudson, Julia Gensheimer, Masao Hashimoto, Andreas Wieland, Rajesh Valanparambil, Peng Li, Jian-xin Lin, Bogumila Konieczny, Se Im, Gordon Freeman, Warren Leonard, Haydn Kissick, Rafi Ahmed
Relevant Conditions

Meningitis