7 research outputs found
PD-L1 Overexpression, SWI/SNF Complex Deregulation, and Profound Transcriptomic Changes Characterize Cancer-Dependent Exhaustion of Persistently Activated CD4+ T Cells
Growing tumors avoid recognition and destruction by the immune system. During
continuous stimulation of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) by tumors, TILs become functionally
exhausted; thus, they become unable to kill tumor cells and to produce certain cytokines and lose
their ability to proliferate. This collectively results in the immune escape of cancer cells. Here, we
show that breast cancer cells expressing PD-L1 can accelerate exhaustion of persistently activated
human effector CD4+ T cells, manifesting in high PD-1 and PD-L1 expression level son T cell surfaces,
decreased glucose metabolism genes, strong downregulation of SWI/SNF chromatin remodelingcomplex subunits, and p21 cell cycle inhibitor upregulation. This results in inhibition of T cell
proliferation and reduction of T cell numbers. The RNAseq analysis on exhausted CD4+ T cells
indicated strong overexpression of IDO1 and genes encoding pro-inflammatory cytokines and
chemokines. Some interleukins were also detected in media from CD4+ T cells co-cultured with
cancer cells. The PD-L1 overexpression was also observed in CD4+ T cells after co-cultivation with
other cell lines overexpressing PD-L1, which suggested the existence of a general mechanism of CD4+
T cell exhaustion induced by cancer cells. The ChIP analysis on the PD-L1 promoter region indicated
that the BRM recruitment in control CD4+ T cells was replaced by BRG1 and EZH2 in CD4+ T cells
strongly exhausted by cancer cells. These findings suggest that epi-drugs such as EZH2 inhibitors
may be used as immunomodulators in cancer treatment