Abstract

Abstract After exposure to chronic inflammatory stimuli, the immune system can switch from a functional state where it acts to reestablish homeostasis to a dysfunctional state. In the context of cancer, T cells that become exposed to continuous stimulation eventually reach a state of exhaustion, characterized by poor effector function and expression of inhibitory receptors, such as PD-1. Although PD-1 signaling inhibition leads to T cell reinvigoration and has been applied as an effective treatment versus a wide range of tumors, the signaling pathway downstream of this receptor is still poorly understood. Recent work from others and us challenged the notion that the phosphatase shp-2 is essential for activation of the molecular cascade downstream PD-1 receptor engagement. The shp-2 homologue (shp-1) has also been associated with PD-1 signaling in T cells and functional redundancy between these phosphatases might occur downstream of this receptor. Therefore, we investigated the effect of shp-1 and the combination of both (shp-1/2) downstream of PD-1 by knocking out these phosphatases in T cells in a mouse model. In vivo results after tumor engraftment suggest that shp-1 as well as shp-1/2 deletion in T cells are not sufficient to ameliorate tumor control. Furthermore, ablation of shp-1 and shp-1/2 impair the beneficial effects of the anti-PD1 treatment. In fact, deletion of both phosphatases leads to decrease CD8+ T cell presence in the tumor microenvironment and in vitro results show that these cells have impaired survival. This data implies that elimination or inhibition of shp-1/2 is not a suitable strategy for effective immunotherapeutic approaches as well as highlights the importance of further elucidating the mechanisms behind this important inhibitory pathway. Citation Format: Pedro Ventura, Milica Gakovic, Berenice Fischer, Sarah Thomson, Hanif J Khameneh, Alessandro Zenobi, Giorgia Rota, Eric Vivier, Walter Birchmeier, Doreen Cantrell, Greta Guarda. Function of shp-1 and shp-2 phosphatases in T cell-mediated anti-tumor response [abstract]. In: Abstracts: AACR Virtual Special Conference: Tumor Immunology and Immunotherapy; 2021 Oct 5-6. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Immunol Res 2022;10(1 Suppl):Abstract nr P051.

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