4.8 Article

TIGIT can inhibit T cell activation via ligation-induced nanoclusters, independent of CD226 co-stimulation

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-40755-3

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This study demonstrates that TIGIT directly inhibits lymphocyte activation independently of CD226 by forming nanoclusters and interacting with TCR.
TIGIT is an inhibitory receptor expressed on lymphocytes and can inhibit T cells by preventing CD226 co-stimulation through interactions in cis or through competition of shared ligands. Whether TIGIT directly delivers cell-intrinsic inhibitory signals in T cells remains unclear. Here we show, by analysing lymphocytes from matched human tumour and peripheral blood samples, that TIGIT and CD226 co-expression is rare on tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes. Using super-resolution microscopy and other techniques, we demonstrate that ligation with CD155 causes TIGIT to reorganise into dense nanoclusters, which coalesce with T cell receptor (TCR)-rich clusters at immune synapses. Functionally, this reduces cytokine secretion in a manner dependent on TIGIT's intracellular ITT-like signalling motif. Thus, we provide evidence that TIGIT directly inhibits lymphocyte activation, acting independently of CD226, requiring intracellular signalling that is proximal to the TCR. Within the subset of tumours where TIGIT-expressing cells do not commonly co-express CD226, this will likely be the dominant mechanism of action. CD226 provides a co-stimulatory signal to the T cell receptor during activation, and TIGIT is believed to inhibit this process by competing for the CD226 ligand CD155. Here authors show that ligand binding induces dense nanocluster formation by TIGIT which initiates intrinsic, CD226 independent inhibitory signals, proximal to T cell receptor signalling.

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