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Memory T cell-driven differentiation of naive cells impairs adoptive immunotherapy

Authors :
Klebanoff, Christopher A.
Scott, Christopher D.
Leonardi, Anthony J.
Yamamoto, Tori N.
Cruz, Anthony C.
Ouyang, Claudia
Ramaswamy, Madhu
Roychoudhuri, Rahul
Ji, Yun
Eil, Robert L.
Sukumar, Madhusudhanan
Crompton, Joseph G.
Palmer, Douglas C.
Borman, Zachary A.
Clever, David
Thomas, Stacy K.
Patel, Shashankkumar
Yu, Zhiya
Muranski, Pawel
Wang, Ena
Marincola, Francesco M.
Gros, Alena
Gattinoni, Luca
Rosenberg, Steven A.
Siegel, Richard M.
Restifo, Nicholas P.
Source :
Journal of Clinical Investigation. January 1, 2016, p318, 17 p.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Adoptive cell transfer (ACT) of purified naive, stem cell memory, and central memory T cell subsets results in superior persistence and antitumor immunity compared with ACT of populations containing more-differentiated effector memory and effector T cells. Despite a clear advantage of the less-differentiated populations, the majority of ACT trials utilize unfractionated T cell subsets. Here, we have challenged the notion that the mere presence of less- differentiated T cells in starting populations used to generate therapeutic T cells is sufficient to convey their desirable attributes. Using both mouse and human cells, we identified a T cell-T cell interaction whereby antigen- experienced subsets directly promote the phenotypic, functional, and metabolic differentiation of naive T cells. This process led to the loss of less- differentiated T cell subsets and resulted in impaired cellular persistence and tumor regression in mouse models following ACT. The T memory-induced conversion of naive T cells was mediated by a nonapoptotic Fas signal, resulting in Akt- driven cellular differentiation. Thus, induction of Fas signaling enhanced T cell differentiation and impaired antitumor immunity, while Fas signaling blockade preserved the antitumor efficacy of naive cells within mixed populations. These findings reveal that T cell subsets can synchronize their differentiation state in a process similar to quorum sensing in unicellular organisms and suggest that disruption of this quorum-like behavior among T cells has potential to enhance T cell-based immunotherapies.<br />Introduction Adoptive cell transfer (ACT), the ex vivo expansion and reinfusion of antigen-specific (Ag-specific) T cells, represents a potentially curative treatment for patients with advanced cancer (1-4) and viral-reactivation syndromes [...]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219738
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.440400073
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI81217