Differentiation pathway of virus-specific stem-like CD8+ T cells during chronic infection Öffentlichkeit

Gensheimer, Julia (Spring 2019)

Permanent URL: https://etd.library.emory.edu/concern/etds/df65v866p?locale=de
Published

Abstract

T cell exhaustion is a characteristic feature of chronic viral infection and cancer. Exhausted CD8+ T cells are marked by the expression of negative regulatory surface proteins and progressive loss of effector function. Targeting checkpoint molecules expressed on exhausted CD8+ T cells restores their proliferative capacity, cytotoxicity, and cytokine production. These molecules, such as PD-1 pathway inhibitors, are successful at treating many cancer types; however, not all tumor types are susceptible nor do all patients with these tumors respond. Two major obstacles to improving immunotherapy are the co-expression of multiple inhibitory proteins on the surface of exhausted CD8+ T cells and the heterogeneity present within the antigen-specific CD8+ T cell pool in chronic viral infection and cancer. In the mouse lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus model of chronic infection, two antigen-specific CD8+ T cell populations have been identified: a PD-1 + Tcf-1 + stem-like subset capable of self-renewal and differentiation into a second, more terminally-differentiated PD-1 + Tim3+ effector-like population. These Tcf-1 + stem-like CD8+ T cells have now been found in a variety of chronic viral infections and human tumors. Here, we perform RNA-sequencing to comprehensively identify the repertoire of cell surface molecules expressed by these two exhausted CD8+ T cell populations. We find that expression of CD101 divides PD-1 + Tim3+ CD8+ T cells into two distinct populations. Using adoptive transfer experiments, we show that the stem-like Tcf-1 + CD8+ T cells initially differentiate into a transitory population of CD101- Tim3+ cells that later irreversibly convert into CD101+ Tim3+ cells. CD101+ Tim3+ CD8+ T cells are transcriptionally distinct from both stemlike and CD101- Tim3+ transitory cells, including altered expression of transcription factors and high levels of many checkpoint molecules. In contrast, recently-generated CD101- Tim3+ cells show a distinct, effector-like transcriptional signature and are more functional than the terminally differentiated CD101+ Tim3+ cells. PD-1 pathway blockade increases the numbers of these newly-generated CD101- Tim3+ CD8+ T cells, suggesting that these transitory and more functional cells may play a critical role in PD-1 based immunotherapy.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1

Methods 4

Results 10

Discussion 27

Future Directions 30

Conclusion 32

References 34

About this Honors Thesis

Rights statement
  • Permission granted by the author to include this thesis or dissertation in this repository. All rights reserved by the author. Please contact the author for information regarding the reproduction and use of this thesis or dissertation.
School
Department
Degree
Submission
Language
  • English
Research Field
Stichwort
Committee Chair / Thesis Advisor
Committee Members
Zuletzt geändert

Primary PDF

Supplemental Files