Purpose: Combination of chemotherapy with programmed cell death 1 (PD-1) blockade is a front-line treatment for lung cancer. However, it remains unknown whether and how chemotherapy affects the response of exhausted CD8 T cells to PD-1 blockade. Experimental Design: We used the well-established mouse model of T-cell exhaustion with chronic lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) infection to assess the effect of chemotherapy (cisplatin pemetrexed) on T-cell response to PD-1 blockade, in the absence of the impact of chemotherapy on antigen release and presentation observed in tumor models. Results: When concomitantly administered with PD-1 blockade, chemotherapy affected the differentiation path of LCMV-specific CD8 T cells from stem-like to transitory effector cells, thereby reducing their expansion and production of IFNg. After combination treatment, these restrained effector responses resulted in impaired viral control, compared with PD-1 blockade alone. The sequential combination strategy, where PD-1 blockade followed chemotherapy, proved to be superior to the concomitant combination, preserving the proliferative response of exhausted CD8 T cells to PD-1 blockade. Our findings suggest that the stem-like CD8 T cells themselves are relatively unaffected by chemotherapy partly because they are quiescent and maintained by slow self-renewal at the steady state. However, upon the proliferative burst mediated by PD-1 blockade, the accelerated differentiation and self-renewal of stem-like cells may be curbed by concomitant chemotherapy, ultimately resulting in impaired overall CD8 T-cell effector functions. Conclusions: In a translational context, we provide a proofof- concept to consider optimizing the timing of chemoimmunotherapy strategies for improved CD8 T-cell functions.
CITATION STYLE
Mariniello, A., Nasti, T. H., Chang, D. Y., Hashimoto, M., Malik, S., McManus, D. T., … Ahmed, R. (2024). Platinum-Based Chemotherapy Attenuates the Effector Response of CD8 T Cells to Concomitant PD-1 Blockade. Clinical Cancer Research, 30(9), 1833–1845. https://doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-23-1316
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