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Interruption of the intratumor CD8+ T cell:Treg crosstalk improves the efficacy of PD-1 immunotherapy
- Geels, Shannon N;
- Moshensky, Alexander;
- Sousa, Rachel S;
- Murat, Claire;
- Bustos, Matias A;
- Walker, Benjamin L;
- Singh, Rima;
- Harbour, Stacey N;
- Gutierrez, Giselle;
- Hwang, Michael;
- Mempel, Thorsten R;
- Weaver, Casey T;
- Nie, Qing;
- Hoon, Dave SB;
- Ganesan, Anand K;
- Othy, Shivashankar;
- Marangoni, Francesco
- et al.
Abstract
PD-1 blockade unleashes potent antitumor activity in CD8+ T cells but can also promote immunosuppressive T regulatory (Treg) cells, which may worsen the response to immunotherapy. Tumor-Treg inhibition is a promising strategy to improve the efficacy of checkpoint blockade immunotherapy; however, our understanding of the mechanisms supporting tumor-Tregs during PD-1 immunotherapy is incomplete. Here, we show that PD-1 blockade increases tumor-Tregs in mouse models of melanoma and metastatic melanoma patients. Mechanistically, Treg accumulation is not caused by Treg-intrinsic inhibition of PD-1 signaling but depends on an indirect effect of activated CD8+ T cells. CD8+ T cells produce IL-2 and colocalize with Tregs in mouse and human melanomas. IL-2 upregulates the anti-apoptotic protein ICOS on tumor-Tregs, promoting their accumulation. Inhibition of ICOS signaling before PD-1 immunotherapy improves control over immunogenic melanoma. Thus, interrupting the intratumor CD8+ T cell:Treg crosstalk represents a strategy to enhance the therapeutic efficacy of PD-1 immunotherapy.
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