Abstract
Clinical response rates after adoptive cell therapy (ACT) are highly correlated with in vivo persistence of the infused T cells. However, antigen-specific T cells found in tumor sites are often well-differentiated effector cells with limited persistence. Central memory CD8+T cells, capable of self-renewal, represent desirable ACT products. We report here that exposure to a histone deacetylase inhibitor (HDACi) and IL21 could reprogram differentiated human CD8+T cells into central memory-like T cells. Dedifferentiation of CD8+T cells was initiated by increased H3 acetylation and chromatin accessibility at the CD28 promoter region. This led to IL21-mediated pSTAT3 binding to the CD28 region, and subsequent upregulation of surface CD28 and CD62L (markers of central memory T cells). The reprogrammed cells exhibited enhanced proliferation in response to both IL2 and IL15, and a stable memory-associated transcriptional signature (increased Lef1 and Tcf7). Our findings support the application of IL21 and HDACi for the in vitro generation of highly persistent T-cell populations that can augment the efficacy of adoptively transferred T cells.
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CITATION STYLE
Wang, J., Hasan, F., Frey, A. C., Li, H. S., Park, J., Pan, K., … Yee, C. (2020). Histone deacetylase inhibitors and IL21 cooperate to reprogram human effector CD8+T cells to memory T Cells. Cancer Immunology Research, 8(6), 794–805. https://doi.org/10.1158/2326-6066.CIR-19-0619
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