Abstract

The immune response consists of a finely-tuned program, the activation of which must be coupled with inhibitory mechanisms whenever initiated. This ensures tight control of beneficial anti-pathogen and anti-tumor responses while preserving tissue integrity, promoting tissue repair, and safeguarding against autoimmunity. A cogent example of this binary response is in the mobilization of co-stimulatory and co-inhibitory signaling in regulating the strength and type of a T-cell response. Of particular importance is the costimulatory molecule CD28 which is countered by CTLA-4. While the role of CD28 in the immune response has been thoroughly elucidated, many aspects of CTLA-4 biology remain controversial. The expression of CD28 is largely constrained to constitutive expression in T-cells and as such, teasing out its function has been somewhat simplified by a limited and specific expression profile. The expression of CTLA-4, on the other hand, while reported predominantly in T-cells, has also been described on a diverse repertoire of cells within both lymphoid and myeloid lineages as well as on the surface of tumors. Nonetheless, the function of CTLA-4 has been mostly described within the context of T-cell biology. The focus on T-cell biology may be a direct result of the high degree of amino acid sequence homology and the co-expression pattern of CD28 and CTLA-4, which initially led to the discovery of CTLA-4 as a counter receptor to CD28 (for which a T-cell-activating role had already been described). Furthermore, observations of the outsized role of CTLA-4 in Treg-mediated immune suppression and the striking phenotype of T-cell hyperproliferation and resultant disease in CTLA-4−/− mice contribute to an appropriate T-cell-centric focus in the study of CTLA-4. Complete elucidation of CTLA-4 biology, however, may require a more nuanced understanding of its role in a context other than that of T-cells. This makes particular sense in light of the remarkable, yet limited utility of anti-CTLA-4 antibodies in the treatment of cancers and of CTLA-4-Ig in autoimmune disorders like rheumatoid arthritis. By fully deducing the biology of CTLA-4-regulated immune homeostasis, bottlenecks that hinder the widespread applicability of CTLA-4-based immunotherapies can be resolved.

Highlights

  • CD28 and CTLA-4 are homologous glycoproteins of the immunoglobulin superfamily [1]

  • T-cell CTLA-4 is largely constrained to intracellular expression some surface expression may be detectable owing to the rapid, continuous shuttling of CTLA-4 between intracellular compartments and the plasma membrane [10, 19,20,21,22]

  • The expression of CTLA-4 by a dendritic cell vaccine was found to impact antitumor efficacy [65]. siRNA-mediated knockdown of CTLA-4 in a dendritic cells (DCs) vaccine significantly improved tumor control and survival, correlating with vastly increased frequency of activated CD8+ T-cells. This result was verified in human monocyte-derived DC which, following treatment with CTLA4 siRNA, stimulated the proliferation of far greater numbers of IFN-g+ CD8+ T-cells and far fewer CD4+ CD25+ Foxp3+ phenotypic Tregs

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

CD28 and CTLA-4 are homologous glycoproteins of the immunoglobulin superfamily [1]. Despite their shared ability to bind CD80/B7.1 and CD86/B7.2 (B7 proteins) [2, 3], these molecules mediate opposing effects on T-cell function. SiRNA-mediated knockdown of CTLA-4 in a DC vaccine significantly improved tumor control and survival, correlating with vastly increased frequency of activated CD8+ T-cells This result was verified in human monocyte-derived DC which, following treatment with CTLA4 siRNA, stimulated the proliferation of far greater numbers of IFN-g+ CD8+ T-cells and far fewer CD4+ CD25+ Foxp3+ phenotypic Tregs. Perhaps CTLA-4 expression promotes tumor escape in the periphery (by inhibiting antitumor responses) but is incapable of inhibiting malignant lymphocyte proliferation through well-documented cellintrinsic modes of immune suppression These questions are yet to be resolved, observations derived from studies of B-cell CTLA-4 in CLL have revealed important clues that could mirror the physiology of CTLA-4 in T-cell malignancies [74, 75]. CTLA-4–Ig-transfected J558L murine myeloma [47], T-cells and Isotype controls [45,46,47,48, 50]

Functional analyses using CTLA-4-Fc and NK cells from CTLA-4 KO mice
Immunohistochemistry

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