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Title

Exhausted T cells and epigenetic status.

Authors

Ziqing Zeng; Feng Wei; Xiubao Ren

Abstract

Exhausted T cells are a group of dysfunctional T cells, which are present in chronic infections or tumors. The most significant characteristics of exhausted T cells are attenuated effector cytotoxicity, reduced cytokine production, and upregulation of multiple inhibitory molecular receptors (e.g., PD-1, TIM-3, and LAG-3). The intracellular metabolic changes, altered expression of transcription factors, and a unique epigenetic landscape constitute the exhaustion program. Recently, researchers have made progress in understanding exhausted T cells, with the definition and identification of exhausted T cells changing from phenotypebased to being classified at the transcriptional and epigenetic levels. Recent studies have revealed that exhausted T cells can be separated into two subgroups, namely TCF1 PD-1 progenitor-like precursor exhausted cells and TCF1-PD-1 terminally differentiated exhausted T cells. Moreover, the progenitor-like precursor cell population may be a subset of T cells that can respond to immunotherapy. Studies have also found that TOX initiates and dominates the development of exhausted T cells at the transcriptional and epigenetic levels. TOX also maintains T cell survival and may affect decisions regarding treatment strategies. In this review, we discuss the latest developments in T cell exhaustion in regards to definitions, subpopulations, development mechanisms, differences in diverse diseases, and treatment prospects for exhausted T cells. Furthermore, we hypothesize that the epigenetic state regulated by TOX might be the key point, which can determine the reversibility of exhaustion and the efficacy of immunotherapy.

Subjects

T cells; EPIGENETICS; CELL populations; PROGRAMMED cell death 1 receptors; TRANSCRIPTION factors

Publication

Cancer Biology & Medicine, 2020, Vol 17, Issue 4, p923

ISSN

2095-3941

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.20892/j.issn.2095-3941.2020.0338

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