Tumors induce de novo steroid biosynthesis in T cells to evade immunity

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Abstract

Tumors subvert immune cell function to evade immune responses, yet the complex mechanisms driving immune evasion remain poorly understood. Here we show that tumors induce de novo steroidogenesis in T lymphocytes to evade anti-tumor immunity. Using a transgenic steroidogenesis-reporter mouse line we identify and characterize de novo steroidogenic immune cells, defining the global gene expression identity of these steroid-producing immune cells and gene regulatory networks by using single-cell transcriptomics. Genetic ablation of T cell steroidogenesis restricts primary tumor growth and metastatic dissemination in mouse models. Steroidogenic T cells dysregulate anti-tumor immunity, and inhibition of the steroidogenesis pathway is sufficient to restore anti-tumor immunity. This study demonstrates T cell de novo steroidogenesis as a mechanism of anti-tumor immunosuppression and a potential druggable target.

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Mahata, B., Pramanik, J., van der Weyden, L., Polanski, K., Kar, G., Riedel, A., … Teichmann, S. A. (2020). Tumors induce de novo steroid biosynthesis in T cells to evade immunity. Nature Communications, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-17339-6

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