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Mitochondrial stress induced by continuous stimulation under hypoxia rapidly drives T cell exhaustion
Author(s) -
Nicole E. Scharping,
Dayana B. Rivadeneira,
Ashley V. Menk,
Paolo Vignali,
B. Rhodes Ford,
Natalie Rittenhouse,
Ronal Peralta,
Yiyang Wang,
Yupeng Wang,
Kristin DePeaux,
Amanda C. Poholek,
Greg M. Delgoffe
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
nature immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.074
H-Index - 388
eISSN - 1529-2916
pISSN - 1529-2908
DOI - 10.1038/s41590-020-00834-9
Subject(s) - microbiology and biotechnology , biology , hypoxia (environmental) , stimulation , reactive oxygen species , t cell , mitochondrion , reprogramming , cell , cancer research , immune system , immunology , chemistry , endocrinology , biochemistry , oxygen , organic chemistry
Cancer and chronic infections induce T cell exhaustion, a hypofunctional fate carrying distinct epigenetic, transcriptomic and metabolic characteristics. However, drivers of exhaustion remain poorly understood. As intratumoral exhausted T cells experience severe hypoxia, we hypothesized that metabolic stress alters their responses to other signals, specifically, persistent antigenic stimulation. In vitro, although CD8 + T cells experiencing continuous stimulation or hypoxia alone differentiated into functional effectors, the combination rapidly drove T cell dysfunction consistent with exhaustion. Continuous stimulation promoted Blimp-1-mediated repression of PGC-1α-dependent mitochondrial reprogramming, rendering cells poorly responsive to hypoxia. Loss of mitochondrial function generated intolerable levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS), sufficient to promote exhausted-like states, in part through phosphatase inhibition and the consequent activity of nuclear factor of activated T cells. Reducing T cell-intrinsic ROS and lowering tumor hypoxia limited T cell exhaustion, synergizing with immunotherapy. Thus, immunologic and metabolic signaling are intrinsically linked: through mitigation of metabolic stress, T cell differentiation can be altered to promote more functional cellular fates.

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