4.8 Article

Tumor-Specific T Cell Dysfunction Is a Dynamic Antigen-Driven Differentiation Program Initiated Early during Tumorigenesis

Journal

IMMUNITY
Volume 45, Issue 2, Pages 389-401

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.immuni.2016.07.011

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Funding

  1. Irvington Institute Fellowship Program of the Cancer Research Institute
  2. NIH/NCI grant [K99/R00 CA172371]
  3. V Foundation for Cancer Research
  4. Josie Robertson Young Investigators Program
  5. MSK Cancer Center Support Grant/Core Grant [P30 CA008748, R01 CA033084, R21 AI107776]
  6. Korean Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology [FND 7008-08]
  7. NIH grant [P30 CA015704-39, K08CA158069]

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CD8(+) T cells recognizing tumor-specific antigens are detected in cancer patients but are dysfunctional. Here we developed a tamoxifen-inducible liver cancer mouse model with a defined oncogenic driver antigen (SV40 large T-antigen) to follow the activation and differentiation of naive tumor-specific CD8(+) T (TST) cells after tumor initiation. Early during the pre-malignant phase of tumorigenesis, TST cells became dysfunctional, exhibiting phenotypic, functional, and transcriptional features similar to dysfunctional T cells isolated from late-stage human tumors. Thus, T cell dysfunction seen in advanced human cancers may already be established early during tumorigenesis. Although the TST cell dysfunctional state was initially therapeutically reversible, it ultimately evolved into a fixed state. Persistent antigen exposure rather than factors associated with the tumor microenvironment drove dysfunction. Moreover, the TST cell differentiation and dysfunction program exhibited features distinct from T cell exhaustion in chronic infections. Strategies to overcome this antigen-driven, cell-intrinsic dysfunction may be required to improve cancer immunotherapy.

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