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TGFβ suppresses CD8+ T cell expression of CXCR3 and tumor trafficking

Andrew J. Gunderson, Tomoko Yamazaki, Kayla McCarty, Nathaniel Fox, Michaela Phillips, Alejandro Alice, Tiffany C. Blair, Mark H. Whiteford, David O’Brien, Rehan Ahmad, Maria X Kiely, Amanda V. Hayman, Todd S. Crocenzi, Michael J. Gough, Marka R. Crittenden, Kristina H. Young

2020Nature Communications219 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Transforming growth factor beta (TGFβ) is a multipotent immunosuppressive cytokine. TGFβ excludes immune cells from tumors, and TGFβ inhibition improves the efficacy of cytotoxic and immune therapies. Using preclinical colorectal cancer models in cell type-conditional TGFβ receptor I (ALK5) knockout mice, we interrogate this mechanism. Tumor growth delay and radiation response are unchanged in animals with Treg or macrophage-specific ALK5 deletion. However, CD8αCre-ALK5 flox/flox (ALK5 ΔCD8 ) mice reject tumors in high proportions, dependent on CD8 + T cells. ALK5 ΔCD8 mice have more tumor-infiltrating effector CD8 + T cells, with more cytotoxic capacity. ALK5-deficient CD8 + T cells exhibit increased CXCR3 expression and enhanced migration towards CXCL10. TGFβ reduces CXCR3 expression, and increases binding of Smad2 to the CXCR3 promoter. In vivo CXCR3 blockade partially abrogates the survival advantage of an ALK5 ΔCD8 host. These data demonstrate a mechanism of TGFβ immunosuppression through inhibition of CXCR3 in CD8 + T cells, thereby limiting their trafficking into tumors.

Topics & Concepts

CXCR3Cell biologyExpression (computer science)CD8BiologyCancer researchImmunologyInflammationChemokineAntigenComputer scienceChemokine receptorProgramming languageColorectal Cancer Surgical TreatmentsCancer Immunotherapy and BiomarkersTGF-β signaling in diseases