1. Epigenetic tuning of PD-1 expression improves exhausted T cell function and viral control.
- Author
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Weiss SA, Huang AY, Fung ME, Martinez D, Chen ACY, LaSalle TJ, Miller BC, Scharer CD, Hegde M, Nguyen TH, Rowe JH, Osborn JF, Patterson DG, Sifnugel N, Mei-An Nolan C, Davidson RA, Schwartz MA, Bally APR, Neeld DK, LaFleur MW, Boss JM, Doench JG, Nicholas Haining W, Sharpe AH, and Sen DR
- Subjects
- Animals, Mice, Lymphocyte Activation immunology, Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis immunology, Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis virology, Enhancer Elements, Genetic genetics, Programmed Cell Death 1 Receptor metabolism, Programmed Cell Death 1 Receptor genetics, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, Epigenesis, Genetic, Mice, Knockout, Mice, Inbred C57BL
- Abstract
PD-1 is a key negative regulator of CD8
+ T cell activation and is highly expressed by exhausted T cells in cancer and chronic viral infection. Although PD-1 blockade can improve viral and tumor control, physiological PD-1 expression prevents immunopathology and improves memory formation. The mechanisms driving high PD-1 expression in exhaustion are not well understood and could be critical to disentangling its beneficial and detrimental effects. Here, we functionally interrogated the epigenetic regulation of PD-1 using a mouse model with deletion of an exhaustion-specific PD-1 enhancer. Enhancer deletion exclusively alters PD-1 expression in CD8+ T cells in chronic infection, creating a 'sweet spot' of intermediate expression where T cell function is optimized compared to wild-type and Pdcd1-knockout cells. This permits improved control of chronic infection without additional immunopathology. Together, these results demonstrate that tuning PD-1 via epigenetic editing can reduce CD8+ T cell dysfunction while avoiding excess immunopathology., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.)- Published
- 2024
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