The Journal of Clinical Investigation (Aug 2023)

Donor T cell STAT3 deficiency enables tissue PD-L1–dependent prevention of graft-versus-host disease while preserving graft-versus-leukemia activity

  • Qinjian Li,
  • Xiaoqi Wang,
  • Qingxiao Song,
  • Shijie Yang,
  • Xiwei Wu,
  • Dongyun Yang,
  • Isabelle J. Marié,
  • Hanjun Qin,
  • Moqian Zheng,
  • Ubaydah Nasri,
  • Xiaohui Kong,
  • Bixin Wang,
  • Elizabeth Lizhar,
  • Kaniel Cassady,
  • Josh Tompkins,
  • David Levy,
  • Paul J. Martin,
  • Xi Zhang,
  • Defu Zeng

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 133, no. 15

Abstract

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STAT3 deficiency (STAT3–/–) in donor T cells prevents graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), but the impact on graft-versus-leukemia (GVL) activity and mechanisms of GVHD prevention remains unclear. Here, using murine models of GVHD, we show that STAT3–/– donor T cells induced only mild reversible acute GVHD while preserving GVL effects against nonsusceptible acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cells in a donor T cell dose–dependent manner. GVHD prevention depended on programmed death ligand 1/programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-L1/PD-1) signaling. In GVHD target tissues, STAT3 deficiency amplified PD-L1/PD-1 inhibition of glutathione (GSH)/Myc pathways that regulate metabolic reprogramming in activated T cells, with decreased glycolytic and mitochondrial ATP production and increased mitochondrial ROS production and dysfunction, leading to tissue-specific deletion of host-reactive T cells and prevention of GVHD. Mitochondrial STAT3 deficiency alone did not reduce GSH expression or prevent GVHD. In lymphoid tissues, the lack of host-tissue PD-L1 interaction with PD-1 reduced the inhibition of the GSH/Myc pathway despite reduced GSH production caused by STAT3 deficiency and allowed donor T cell functions that mediate GVL activity. Therefore, STAT3 deficiency in donor T cells augments PD-1 signaling–mediated inhibition of GSH/Myc pathways and augments dysfunction of T cells in GVHD target tissues while sparing T cells in lymphoid tissues, leading to prevention of GVHD while preserving GVL effects.

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