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, Liu Hui, Wang Ena, Marincola Francesco M, Gros Alena, Gattinoni Luca, Rosenberg Steven A, Siegel Richard M, Restifo Nicholas P
J Clin Invest. 2016 Jan;126(1):318-34. doi: 10.1172/JCI81217. Epub 2015 Dec 14.
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.
与含有更多分化的效应记忆T细胞和效应T细胞的群体进行过继性细胞转移(ACT)相比,纯化的初始T细胞、干细胞记忆T细胞和中枢记忆T细胞亚群的ACT能产生更强的持久性和抗肿瘤免疫力。尽管分化程度较低的群体具有明显优势,但大多数ACT试验使用的是未分离的T细胞亚群。在这里,我们对一种观念提出了质疑,即用于产生治疗性T细胞的起始群体中仅仅存在分化程度较低的T细胞就足以赋予它们理想的特性。利用小鼠和人类细胞,我们确定了一种T细胞与T细胞之间的相互作用,即抗原经历过的亚群直接促进初始T细胞的表型、功能和代谢分化。这一过程导致分化程度较低的T细胞亚群减少,并导致ACT后小鼠模型中的细胞持久性受损和肿瘤消退。初始T细胞的T记忆诱导转化是由非凋亡性Fas信号介导的,导致Akt驱动的细胞分化。因此,Fas信号的诱导增强了T细胞分化并损害了抗肿瘤免疫力,而Fas信号阻断则保留了混合群体中初始细胞的抗肿瘤功效。这些发现表明,T细胞亚群可以在一个类似于单细胞生物群体感应的过程中同步它们的分化状态,并表明破坏T细胞之间这种类似群体感应的行为有可能增强基于T细胞的免疫疗法。