4.7 Article

PD-1 Co-inhibitory and OX40 Co-stimulatory Crosstalk Regulates Helper T Cell Differentiation and Anti-Plasmodium Humoral Immunity

Journal

CELL HOST & MICROBE
Volume 17, Issue 5, Pages 628-641

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2015.03.007

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Funding

  1. NIH [T32AI007633, 1K22AI099070]
  2. American Heart Association [13BGIA17140002]
  3. Presbyterian Health Foundation of Oklahoma City
  4. NIH/NIGMS [8P20GM103447]
  5. Division of Intramural Research, NIH/NIAID

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The differentiation and protective capacity of Plasmodium-specific T cells are regulated by both positive and negative signals during malaria, but the molecular and cellular details remain poorly defined. Here we show that malaria patients and Plasmodium-infected rodents exhibit atypical expression of the co-stimulatory receptor OX40 on CD4 T cells and that therapeutic enhancement of OX40 signaling enhances helper CD4 T cell activity, humoral immunity, and parasite clearance in rodents. However, these beneficial effects of OX40 signaling are abrogated following coordinate blockade of PD-1 co-inhibitory pathways, which are also upregulated during malaria and associated with elevated parasitemia. Co-administration of biologics blocking PD-1 and promoting OX40 signaling induces excessive interferon-gamma that directly limits helper T cell-mediated support of humoral immunity and decreases parasite control. Our results show that targeting OX40 can enhance Plasmodium control and that crosstalk between co-inhibitory and co-stimulatory pathways in pathogen-specific CD4 T cells can impact pathogen clearance.

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