1. Dynamic chromatin regulatory landscape of human CAR T cell exhaustion.
- Author
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Gennert DG, Lynn RC, Granja JM, Weber EW, Mumbach MR, Zhao Y, Duren Z, Sotillo E, Greenleaf WJ, Wong WH, Satpathy AT, Mackall CL, and Chang HY
- Subjects
- Animals, Antigens, CD19, Cell Line, Chromatin genetics, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Humans, Mice, Programmed Cell Death 1 Receptor genetics, Chromatin metabolism, Neoplasms therapy, Programmed Cell Death 1 Receptor metabolism, Receptors, Chimeric Antigen, T-Lymphocytes physiology
- Abstract
Dysfunction in T cells limits the efficacy of cancer immunotherapy. We profiled the epigenome, transcriptome, and enhancer connectome of exhaustion-prone GD2-targeting HA-28z chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells and control CD19-targeting CAR T cells, which present less exhaustion-inducing tonic signaling, at multiple points during their ex vivo expansion. We found widespread, dynamic changes in chromatin accessibility and three-dimensional (3D) chromosome conformation preceding changes in gene expression, notably at loci proximal to exhaustion-associated genes such as PDCD1 , CTLA4 , and HAVCR2 , and increased DNA motif access for AP-1 family transcription factors, which are known to promote exhaustion. Although T cell exhaustion has been studied in detail in mice, we find that the regulatory networks of T cell exhaustion differ between species and involve distinct loci of accessible chromatin and cis-regulated target genes in human CAR T cell exhaustion. Deletion of exhaustion-specific candidate enhancers of PDCD1 suppress the expression of PD-1 in an in vitro model of T cell dysfunction and in HA-28z CAR T cells, suggesting enhancer editing as a path forward in improving cancer immunotherapy., Competing Interests: Competing interest statement: H.Y.C. is a cofounder of Accent Therapeutics and Boundless Bio and is an advisor to 10× Genomics, Arsenal Bioscience, and Spring Discovery. C.L.M. is a cofounder of Lyell Immunopharma. R.C.L. is employed by and E.W.W. is a consultant for Lyell Immunopharma. A.T.S. is a cofounder of Immunai., (Copyright © 2021 the Author(s). Published by PNAS.)
- Published
- 2021
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