iScience (Sep 2021)

PD-1-stimulated T cell subsets are transcriptionally and functionally distinct

  • Shalom Lerrer,
  • Anna S. Tocheva,
  • Shoiab Bukhari,
  • Kieran Adam,
  • Adam Mor

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 9
p. 103020

Abstract

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Summary: Despite the obvious inhibitory outcome of PD-1 signaling, an additional series of functions are activated. We have observed that T cells stimulated through the T cell receptor (TCR) and PD-1 primarily do not proliferate; however, there is a population of cells that proliferates more than through TCR stimulation alone. In this study, we performed flow cytometry and RNA sequencing on individual populations of T cells and discovered that unlike naive T cells, which were inhibited following PD-1 ligation, T cells that proliferated more following PD-1 ligation were associated with effector and central memory phenotypes. We showed that these populations had different gene expression profiles following PD-1 ligation with PD-L1 compared to PD-L2. The presence of transcriptionally and functionally distinct T cell populations responsive to PD-1 ligation provides new insights into the biology of PD-1 and suggest the use of T cell subset-specific approaches to improve the clinical outcome of PD-1 blockade.

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