Breakdown of adaptive immunotolerance induces hepatocellular carcinoma in HBsAg-tg mice

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Abstract

Hepatitis B virus (HBV) can induce chronic inflammation, cirrhosis, and eventually hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Despite evidence suggesting a link between adaptive immunity and HBV-related diseases in humans, the immunopathogenic mechanisms involved are seldom described. Here we show that expression of TIGIT, a promising immune checkpoint in tumor immunotherapy, increases with age on hepatic CD8 + T cells in HBsAg-transgenic (HBs-tg) mice whose adaptive immune system is tolerant to HBsAg. TIGIT blockade or deficiency leads to chronic hepatitis and fibrosis, along with the emergence of functional HBsAg-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs), suggesting adaptive immune tolerance could be broken by TIGIT blockade or deficiency. Importantly, HBsAg vaccination further induces nonresolving inflammation and HCC in a CD8 + T cell-dependent manner in TIGIT-blocked or -deficient HBs-tg mice. Therefore, CD8 + T cells play an important role in adaptive immunity-mediated tumor progression and TIGIT is critical in maintenance of liver tolerance by keeping CTLs in homeostatic balance.

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Zong, L., Peng, H., Sun, C., Li, F., Zheng, M., Chen, Y., … Tian, Z. (2019). Breakdown of adaptive immunotolerance induces hepatocellular carcinoma in HBsAg-tg mice. Nature Communications, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-08096-8

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