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PD-1 marks dysfunctional regulatory T cells in malignant gliomas
Daniel E. Lowther, … , J. Christopher Love, David A. Hafler
Daniel E. Lowther, … , J. Christopher Love, David A. Hafler
Published April 21, 2016
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2016;1(5):e85935. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.85935.
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Research Article Immunology Oncology

PD-1 marks dysfunctional regulatory T cells in malignant gliomas

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Abstract

Immunotherapies targeting the immune checkpoint receptor programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) have shown remarkable efficacy in treating cancer. CD4+CD25hiFoxP3+ Tregs are critical regulators of immune responses in autoimmunity and malignancies, but the functional status of human Tregs expressing PD-1 remains unclear. We examined functional and molecular features of PD-1hi Tregs in healthy subjects and patients with glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), combining functional assays, RNA sequencing, and cytometry by time of flight (CyTOF). In both patients with GBM and healthy subjects, circulating PD-1hi Tregs displayed reduced suppression of CD4+ effector T cells, production of IFN-γ, and molecular signatures of exhaustion. Transcriptional profiling of tumor-resident Tregs revealed that several genes coexpressed with PD-1 and associated with IFN-γ production and exhaustion as well as enrichment in exhaustion signatures compared with circulating PD-1hi Tregs. CyTOF analysis of circulating and tumor-infiltrating Tregs from patients with GBM treated with PD-1-blocking antibodies revealed that treatment shifts the profile of circulating Tregs toward a more exhausted phenotype reminiscent of that of tumor-infiltrating Tregs, further increasing IFN-γ production. Thus, high PD-1 expression on human Tregs identifies dysfunctional, exhausted Tregs secreting IFN-γ that exist in healthy individuals and are enriched in tumor infiltrates, possibly losing function as they attempt to modulate the antitumoral immune responses.

Authors

Daniel E. Lowther, Brittany A. Goods, Liliana E. Lucca, Benjamin A. Lerner, Khadir Raddassi, David van Dijk, Amanda L. Hernandez, Xiangguo Duan, Murat Gunel, Vlad Coric, Smita Krishnaswamy, J. Christopher Love, David A. Hafler

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Figure 6

Anti–programmed cell death protein 1 treatment shifts the profile of Tregs in vivo to exhaustion and IFN-γ production.

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Anti–programmed cell death protein 1 treatment shifts the profile of Tre...
(A) Production of IFN-γ relative to baseline (mean ± SEM) by sorted circulating Tregs from 8 glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) patients undergoing nivolumab treatment (3 mg/kg every 2 weeks) over the first 5 weeks. Tregs were restimulated for 6 hours with PMA and ionomycin in the presence of brefeldin A. Significance (1-way ANOVA) is P < 0.05 for week 2 and P < 0.001 for week 5. (B) Summary of the potential effect of anti–programmed cell death protein 1 (anti-PD-1). Tregs were gated as CD127lo and Foxp3hi for A and B. Gating strategy is shown in Supplemental Figure 12. (C) Conditional density resampled estimate of mutual information (DREMI) scores computed with a noise threshold of 0.85 and an arch-transformed range at 0.3 to maximize protein abundance. Heatmap of DREMI scores of the strength of the statistical dependency between each indicated protein and PD-1 for blood week 1, blood week 7, and tumors. (D) Conditional density rescaled visualization (DREVI) plots of each indicated protein against PD-1 for Tregs from blood week 1, blood week 7, and tumors. Red = high dependency, blue = low dependency.

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