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T cell oxygen-sensing proteins establish an immunologically tolerant metastatic niche

Authors :
Clever, David
Roychoudhuri, Rahul
Constantinides, Michael G
Askenase, Michael H
Sukumar, Madhusudhanan
Klebanoff, Christopher A
Eil, Robert L
Hickman, Heather D
Yu, Zhiya
Pan, Jenny H
Palmer, Douglas C
Phan, Anthony T
Goulding, John
Gattinoni, Luca
Goldrath, Ananda W
Belkaid, Yasmine
Restifo, Nicholas P
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Cancer cells must evade immune responses at distant sites to establish metastases. The lung is a frequent site for metastasis. We hypothesized that lung-specific immunoregulatory mechanisms create an immunologically permissive environment for tumor colonization. We found that T-cell-intrinsic expression of the oxygen-sensing prolyl-hydroxylase (PHD) proteins is required to maintain local tolerance against innocuous antigens in the lung but powerfully licenses colonization by circulating tumor cells. PHD proteins limit pulmonary type helper (Th)-1 responses, promote CD4(+)-regulatory T (Treg) cell induction, and restrain CD8(+) T cell effector function. Tumor colonization is accompanied by PHD-protein-dependent induction of pulmonary Treg cells and suppression of IFN-γ-dependent tumor clearance. T-cell-intrinsic deletion or pharmacological inhibition of PHD proteins limits tumor colonization of the lung and improves the efficacy of adoptive cell transfer immunotherapy. Collectively, PHD proteins function in T cells to coordinate distinct immunoregulatory programs within the lung that are permissive to cancer metastasis. PAPERCLIP.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........62b6ba92f46ed0171da6872b160daf2b