Abstract

The adoptive transfer of antigen-specific CD8+ T cells is a promising approach for the treatment of chronic viral and malignant diseases. In order to improve adoptive T cell therapy (ATT) of cancer, recent strategies aim at the antibody-based blockade of immunosuppressive signaling pathways in CD8+ T cells. Alternatively, adjuvant effects of immunostimulatory cytokines might be exploited to improve therapeutic CD8+ T cell responses. For example, Interleukin-7 (IL-7) is a potent growth, activation and survival factor for CD8+ T cells that can be used to improve virus- and tumor-specific CD8+ T cell responses. Although direct IL-7 effects on CD8+ T cells were studied extensively in numerous models, the contribution of IL-7 receptor-competent (IL-7R+) host cells remained unclear. In the current study we provide evidence that CD8+ T cell-mediated tumor rejection in response to recombinant IL-7 (rIL-7) therapy is strictly dependent on IL-7R+ host cells. On the contrary, CD8+ T cell expansion is independent of host IL-7R expression. If, however, rIL-7 therapy and peptide vaccination are combined, host IL-7R signaling is crucial for CD8+ T cell expansion. Unexpectedly, maximum CD8+ T cell expansion relies mainly on IL-7R signaling in non-hematopoietic host cells, similar to the massive accumulation of dendritic cells and granulocytes. In summary, we provide evidence that IL-7R+ host cells are major targets of rIL-7 that modulate therapeutic CD8+ T cell responses and the outcome of rIL-7-assisted ATT. This knowledge may have important implications for the design and optimization of clinical ATT protocols.

Highlights

  • The size of the peripheral T cell pool is remarkably stable throughout life

  • We show that IL-7 receptor (IL-7R)+ non-hematopoietic host cells are crucial for maximum CD8+ T cell expansion and TM differentiation if recombinant IL-7 (rIL-7) therapy is combined with peptide vaccination

  • OT-I cells were transferred into Rag-/- and Rag-/-IL-7R-/- mice, which were treated with rIL-7

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Summary

Introduction

The size of the peripheral T cell pool is remarkably stable throughout life. Infections can cause a strong increase in T cell numbers, they usually return to steady-state levels after pathogen clearance. This indicates that self-regulatory mechanisms maintain T cell numbers [1]. A central factor controlling peripheral T cell homeostasis is IL-7. It acts as a growth and survival signal for T cells, which express the IL-7R and constitutively consume IL-7 [2]. The size of the peripheral T cell pool becomes self-limiting as soon as IL-7 production

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