Abstract
CD8+ T cells are critical mediators of cytotoxic effector function in infection, cancer and autoimmunity. In cancer and chronic viral infection, CD8+ T cells undergo a progressive loss of cytokine production and cytotoxicity, a state termed T cell exhaustion. In autoimmunity, autoreactive CD8+ T cells retain the capacity to effectively mediate the destruction of host tissues. Although the clinical outcome differs in each context, CD8+ T cells are chronically exposed to antigen in all three. These chronically stimulated CD8+ T cells share some common phenotypic features, as well as transcriptional and epigenetic programming, across disease contexts. A better understanding of these CD8+ T cell states may reveal novel strategies to augment clearance of chronic viral infection and cancer and to mitigate self-reactivity leading to tissue damage in autoimmunity.
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Main
CD8+ T cells are often described as existing at opposite ends of a spectrum of functionality in the context of chronic viral infection and cancer versus autoimmunity (Fig. 1). In autoimmunity, CD8+ T cells overcome numerous tolerance mechanisms, including thymic selection and T cell activation requirements, to exert inappropriate effector function and cause damage to self-tissue. By contrast, CD8+ T cells in chronic infection are exposed to appropriate activating cues (signal 1: antigen/T cell receptor (TCR), signal 2: costimulation, and signal 3: inflammatory cytokines). While CD8+ T cells exhibit similar profiles of transcriptional activation at the early phases of both acute and chronic infection at an early time point1, responding CD8+ T cells in chronic infection quickly begin to exhibit insufficient effector function and are unable to clear the infection. This state of relative dysfunction, termed exhaustion, is also observed in the tumor microenvironment (TME). Blockade or deficiency of immune checkpoints such as PD-1 ameliorates aspects of T cell exhaustion; these same perturbations can precipitate or exacerbate autoimmunity.
Yet, the settings of chronic infection, cancer and autoimmunity share a key defining feature: chronic antigen exposure. New research has begun to define phenotypic similarities between CD8+ T cells in exhausted and autoimmune contexts, including functional, transcriptional and epigenetic features. This may seem counterintuitive, given the ‘opposite ends of the spectrum’ framework of CD8+ T cell state in exhaustion versus autoimmunity, as outlined in Fig. 1. However, the perturbation of some exhaustion-associated features has recently revealed that ‘dysfunctionality’ or ‘hyporesponsiveness’ may in fact be integral for CD8+ T cell persistence in a chronic stimulation context—thus providing a rationale for finding these shared features in chronic viral infection, cancer and autoimmunity. CD8+ T cells in each of these contexts have been extensively discussed in previous reviews2,3,4,5,6,7,8; here we will focus on the salient aspects of CD8+ T cell dysfunction most relevant for highlighting areas of similarity and distinction. A better understanding of CD8+ T cell states in these contexts may reveal new ways to alleviate T cell exhaustion and enhance CD8+ T cell functions in cancer and chronic viral infection, as well as strategies to induce or augment exhaustion-like features to treat autoimmunity.
TCR specificity and affinity
In autoimmunity, chronic infection and cancer, chronic TCR signaling is a critical signal in the development and maintenance of the associated CD8+ T cell state. While chronic TCR signaling is a common feature across these contexts, the target varies: foreign antigens are targeted in chronic viral infection, while T cell responses are directed towards self-antigens in autoimmune disease—and a combination of both neoantigens and self-antigens may be targeted on tumors.
In cancer and chronic viral infection, chronic TCR signaling in the context of inflammatory signals is a critical driver of T cell dysfunction: tumor antigen–specific CD8+ T cells are significantly more exhausted (by reduced cytokine production, high co-inhibitory receptor expression and high TOX expression) than cotransferred non-reactive cells in mouse studies9,10,11. In mice infected with a chronic strain of lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV clone 13), significantly reducing the load of a specific antigen without altering the overall viral load is sufficient to mitigate the development of certain aspects of exhaustion (chronic high PD-1 expression and low TNF production)12. There is also evidence that persistent antigen recognition plays an important role in the maintenance of exhausted cells. When exhausted cells from day 30 of LCMV clone 13 infection are transferred into mice previously infected with acute LCMV Armstrong (cleared of antigen), they persist relatively poorly as compared to cells transferred into chronically infected mice13. Additionally, in mice infected with LCMV clone 13, blockade of the homeostatic/memory maintenance signals IL-7 and IL-15 does not affect antigen-specific cell persistence; this may instead be supported by stimulation from residual antigen14. Furthermore, an epitope alteration in simian immunodeficiency virus, a non-human primate model of chronic viral infection, leads to the loss of responding CD8+ T cell clones15. However, a recent study of hepatitis C virus (HCV)-specific CD8+ T cells from patients treated with direct-acting antiviral therapy identifies some HCV-specific cells that do persist in a setting of undetectable viral load (with a bias towards the progenitor exhausted subset, discussed in more detail below)16. The role of IL-7 and IL-15 signaling, or very low-level antigen, in the maintenance of these cells remains to be determined.
The prevalence of specific CD8+ T cell clones changes during the progression of chronic viral infection and autoimmunity, driven by stages of antigen-driven expansion and subsequent suppression or attrition. In chronic viral infection, high-affinity T cells (for example, DbNP396–404-specific T cells) respond to early dominant epitopes but are extensively deleted by day 25, to a greater extent than lower-affinity T cells (for example, DbGP33–41- and DbGP276–286-specific T cells)17,18,19. This pattern of overactivation leading to cell death could potentially function as a mechanism to prevent excessive damage to the host. At the same time, LCMV clone 13 engineered to express a lower-affinity GP33 variant antigen generates an antigen-specific CD8+ T cell population with reduced exhaustion-associated features, suggesting that T cell exhaustion may be best elicited by antigens of intermediate affinity12.
To maintain homeostasis, high-affinity autoreactive CD8+ T cells that escape central tolerance normally undergo clonal deletion in the periphery, in a process known as cross-tolerization20,21. In autoimmunity, CD8+ T cells undergo antigen-driven expansion into oligoclonal populations that have been implicated in the pathogenesis of multiple autoimmune diseases; for the purposes of this Review, we will focus on multiple sclerosis (MS)22,23, type 1 diabetes (T1D)24,25 and vitiligo26,27,28,29,30. In the nonobese diabetic (NOD) model of T1D, high-affinity CD8+ T cells mediate extensive tissue damage at the later stages of disease. At 3 weeks of age, NOD mice are disease-free and few low-affinity IGRP206–214–specific CD8+ T cells infiltrate the pancreas. By 10–15 weeks of age, the pancreata of NOD mice exhibit overt insulitis and are heavily infiltrated with high-affinity NRP-V7-specific CD8+ T cells31,32,33.
While a substantial amount of work has explored the evolution of high- versus low-affinity neoantigen–MHC interactions in cancer, less is known about the impact of differential peptide–MHC–TCR affinity. A recent study demonstrated that high-affinity T cell clones can exert superior effector function in a mouse model of concurrent cancer and autoimmunity, using shared tumor/self-antigen34. Additionally, work from human clinical trials suggests that TCR clonality may have an important role in the response to checkpoint blockade therapies. CTLA4 blockade has been shown to augment the repertoire diversity of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs)35,36. For PD-1 blockade, early work suggested that response was associated with higher intratumor clonality37. More recent studies have demonstrated that PD-1 blockade drives the recruitment and expansion of new TCR clones in the TME, termed clonal replacement38. These findings suggest that tumor-specific T cells in the TME may possess limited reinvigoration ability and that response to PD-1 blockade may be due to T cell clones recruited to the tumor. Indeed, TCR sequencing paired with single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) has revealed that expanded clonotypes in the tumor tend to be more exhausted/dysfunctional38,39.
Functional profile
In an acute viral infection, CD8+ T cells are critical mediators of a protective immune response. Activated CD8+ T cells exert effector function through direct cytotoxicity (release of granzyme B and perforin) and cytokine production (effector cytokines such as IFN-γ and TNF, as well as proliferation-promoting cytokines such as IL-2); CD4+ T cell help plays an integral role in supporting this activation process (reviewed in Box 1). After clearance of the infection, the responding CD8+ T cell population contracts, with a subset persisting as memory cells that are primed to regain effector function. Chronic viral infection, cancer and autoimmunity all elicit aspects of CD8+ T cell functionality; exhausted CD8+ T cells in the first two contexts show clear deficits, while the relative effector and memory functionality of CD8+ T cells in autoimmunity is less clear. While we focus on the functional changes in CD8+ T cells for the purposes of this Review, it is important to note that CD4+ T cells also exhibit phenotypic differences in these chronic stimulation contexts (reviewed in Box 2).
Compared to CD8+ T cells generated in response to acute infection such as the Armstrong strain of LCMV, exhausted antigen-specific CD8+ T cells generated in response to LCMV clone 13 are characterized by poor proliferation and persistence, in addition to reduced cytotoxicity and cytokine production (less IFN-γ, minimal TNF and almost absent IL-2)17,18,40,41. Exhausted CD8+ T cells are also distinguished by persistent high expression of multiple co-inhibitory receptors, such as PD-1, LAG3, 2B4, TIM3 and CTLA4 (refs. 42,43,44,45); this is distinct from the transient expression of co-inhibitory receptors elicited by an acute infection. These key features have been recapitulated in tumor-specific CD8+ T cells isolated from the TME46,47,48,49,50. T cell dysfunction begins to develop early in chronic viral infection and cancer, and progressively becomes more severe. By day 8, responding CD8+ T cells in mice infected with LCMV clone 13 are less cytotoxic than those from LCMV Armstrong infection17, and scRNA-seq segregates T cells from mice infected with Armstrong or clone 13 into distinct clusters1. Cytokine production (IFN-γ and TNF) is further reduced in CD8+ T cells by day 30 of LCMV clone 13 infection as compared to day 7 (ref. 17). Eventually, exhausted T cells lose the capacity to regain functionality: CD8+ T cells isolated from early LCMV clone 13 infection13 or tumors51 are better able to respond after transfer to an antigen-matched acute infection as compared to cells transferred at a later time point.
Despite their relatively poor functionality as compared to memory and effector cells, exhausted CD8+ T cells still play a critical role in chronic infection and cancer. In a non-human primate model of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, depletion of CD8+ T cells leads to an increase in plasma viremia, even at 1–3 years of infection52,53. Similarly, infection of β-2-microglobulin-deficient mice (which lack CD8+ T cells) results in higher LCMV clone 13 viral titers54. In cancer, enhanced tumor growth is seen with CD8 depletion in mouse tumor models, and in human patients, CD8+ T cell infiltration correlates positively with prognosis (disease-free survival and overall survival) in multiple tumor types55,56. Furthermore, studies of the TME suggest that features of exhaustion are predictive of relatively more functionality (as compared to non-exhausted, likely non-responding cells). In human tumors, TILs expressing markers of exhaustion (PD-1, LAG3 and TIM3) are more likely to express IFN-γ (ref. 47). By scRNA-seq, a ‘dysfunctional’ cluster of TILs from human melanoma can be defined, characterized by high expression of the exhaustion-associated markers TIGIT, PDCD1 and LAG3; tumors with a higher proportion of these ‘dysfunctional’ CD8+ T cells are associated with greater TIL ex vivo tumor reactivity and greater clonality39. While exhausted CD8+ T cells have reduced function as compared to those elicited by an acute infection, these data suggest that it is specifically the exhausted CD8+ T cells that are exerting residual control over tumor growth.
In contrast to the limited pathological effect of responding CD8+ T cells on tissues in chronic infection and cancer, T cells effectively damage host tissues in various autoimmune diseases. Pathogenic CD8+ T cells in these contexts are primarily effector, effector memory and resident memory cells and are critical for disease initiation and progression. The prevalence of CD69+CD103+ resident memory T cells in the epidermis is positively correlated with active vitiligo57,58, and these cells can recruit cytotoxic effector T cells from the circulation important for sustained disease59. In patients with T1D, 50–60% of antigen-specific CD8+ T cells that infiltrate the exocrine pancreas are of a memory (CD45RO+) phenotype60,61. In MS, both effector and effector memory CD45RA+CCR7− and CD45RA−CCR7− CD8+ T cells are associated with active disease62,63,64. Consistently across these autoimmune diseases, pathogenic CD8+ T cells express high levels of effector molecules (granzyme B, perforin, IFN-γ and TNF) in vivo or upon ex vivo restimulation. This is apparent in autoreactive CD8+ T cells that mediate vitiligo28,58,65, NOD diabetes25,32,66, MS64 or central nervous system (CNS) inflammation in mouse models22,67,68. Encephalitogenic and diabetogenic CD8+ T cells also upregulate a combination of co-inhibitory receptors, including LAG3, TIM3 and PD-1 (refs. 22,61,67,68,69,70). By contrast, pathogenic T cells in vitiligo express relatively low levels of PD-1 and LAG3 (refs. 28,58,65). Whereas exhausted T cells in chronic viral infection are independent of IL-7/IL-15 for persistence, pathogenic effector/memory T cells in autoimmune diabetes can be inhibited by blockade of IL-7 (refs. 71,72) or IL-15 (ref. 73). IL-15 blockade can also inhibit vitiligo28, and IL-15 has been implicated in promoting CD8+ T cell effector function in MS74,75.
Despite their maintenance of effector function, there is some evidence that autoreactive CD8+ T cells also exhibit features of exhaustion in autoimmunity. Transcriptional profiling has identified a subset of CD8+ T cells that infiltrate the pancreatic islets of patients with T1D and aged NOD mice with aspects of T cell exhaustion; these exhausted-like CD8+ T cells expand as mice age and progress towards diabetes, while a cytotoxic effector subset does not69,70. The prevalence and importance of exhausted T cells in autoimmunity remains unclear; however, exhausted autoreactive T cells could represent a suppressed but not halted autoimmune disease process. Activated islet-specific CD8+ memory T cells were prevalent in individuals with T1D who experienced rapid loss of the antigen C-peptide; by contrast, slow disease progression was associated with an exhaustion-like profile, with expression of multiple inhibitory receptors, limited cytokine production and reduced proliferative capacity69. A transcriptional profile of T cell exhaustion also correlated with improved prognosis in patients with vasculitis, Crohn’s disease and systemic lupus erythematosus76,77. This relationship between exhaustion-associated properties in autoreactive CD8+ T cells and the rate of autoimmune disease progression makes these phenotypes attractive putative biomarkers of disease trajectory and potential targets for therapeutic intervention.
Heterogeneity within dysfunctional T cell populations
With the expansion of single-cell profiling technologies in immunology, from flow cytometry to scRNA-seq and beyond, the fields of exhaustion and autoimmunity are now equipped to better understand the diversity of CD8+ T cell states across these contexts. In chronic viral infection and cancer, it has recently been appreciated that there are multiple subsets of exhausted cells with distinct functionalities (reviewed in more detail in refs. 7,78,79). Several exhausted subset frameworks have been described39,80,81,82; here we focus on one framework with substantial coherence across cancer and chronic viral infection in both mice and humans. A similar dissection of CD8+ T cell heterogeneity in autoimmunity is underway, with some clear parallels to exhaustion-defined subsets.
A ‘progenitor’ exhausted subset was first described in LCMV clone 13 infection on the basis of intermediate PD-1 expression and high CD44 expression; this was associated with improved persistence and increased expansion in response to anti-PD-L1 treatment83 (Table 1). This subset has also been identified in the TME11,84. The key feature of progenitor exhausted cells is their self-renewal capacity85; they can also differentiate into a ‘terminal’ exhausted subset in an antigen-dependent process11,84. The transcription factor TCF1 (encoded by the gene TCF7) is required for progenitor exhausted CD8+ T cells. TCF1 has also been shown to play an important role in central memory86,87 and stem cell memory CD8+ T cells88, suggesting that it may function to promote self-renewal and persistence. This subset plays an integral role in the control of infection or tumor growth: TCF1-deficient mice exhibit higher viral titers and accelerated tumor growth, while transferring progenitor exhausted cells (as compared to terminal exhausted cells) enhances tumor control11,84,89,90. Importantly, this stem-like population provides the proliferative burst after PD-1 pathway blockade during chronic viral infection11,83,84,85. While a ‘progenitor exhausted-like’ subset of human memory CD8+ T cells has recently been identified91, it is important to note that progenitor exhausted CD8+ T cells are distinct from memory cells: they express high levels of the exhaustion-associated transcription factor TOX (ref. 92), and are more similar to terminal exhausted cells than memory cells by chromatin accessibility profiling11.
The second major subset, terminal exhausted cells, has more direct cytotoxic function11, but persists poorly and does not proliferate in response to PD-1 blockade or tumor vaccination84. Within this TIM3+ subset, additional subpopulations have recently been described: CX3CR1+ ‘transitory’ cells with greater proliferation, cytokine production and cytotoxic potential, which can develop into CD101+ ‘terminal’ cells with the least functionality and poorest survival93,94. This evolving subset landscape highlights the complex role that exhausted CD8+ T cells play: balancing effector function with stem-like function for long-term pathogen/tumor control.
Subsets of stem-like autoreactive CD8+ T cells that share some features with progenitor exhausted T cells have been identified in autoimmunity, but there is no current consensus on markers to define these populations. In NOD mice, scRNA-seq analysis revealed terminal effector-like (Pdcd1hiLag3hi) and stem-like (Tcf7hiToxhi) CD8+ T cell populations, both of which showed differential expression of an exhaustion-associated gene signature by gene set enrichment analysis70. There is also evidence of non-exhausted stem-like T cells within autoimmune effector and memory effector CD8+ T cell populations. Using dextramers for various beta-islet antigens, antigen-specific CD8+ T cells can be identified in the blood of both healthy individuals and patients with T1D. In patients with T1D, these autoreactive CD8+ T cells are primarily a stem-like effector memory phenotype characterized by the expression of CD95 (CD45RA+CD45RO−CCR7+CD95+), while the majority of beta-islet-specific T cells remain naive (CD45RA+CD45RO−CCR7+CD95−) in the blood of healthy individuals24,95,96. Considering autoimmune-related conditions more broadly, non-naive but stem-like CD8+ T cells (CD45RO−CD45RA+CCR7+CD27+CD95+) are elevated in the blood of patients with aplastic anemia, autoimmune uveitis and sickle cell disease97. These findings suggest that stem-like subsets of autoreactive CD8+ T cells present in the blood may be important for the sustained production of more terminal populations that mediate cytotoxic destruction in autoimmune organs. Further studies are required to elucidate the significance of stem-like subsets of CD8+ T cells in autoimmune disease and the potential for durable therapeutic strategies targeting this population.
PD-1/PD-L1 pathway
The PD-1/PD-L1 pathway is a critical immunoregulatory pathway initially described in the context of autoimmunity98,99,100 that is also important in chronic viral infection and cancer. The PD-1 co-inhibitory receptor can be expressed on various hematopoietic cells, including activated CD8+ T cells. Binding of PD-1 to its ligands, PD-L1 or PD-L2, reduces downstream TCR and CD28 signaling and effector T cell functionality101. Physiologically, this pathway negatively regulates T cell activation, mediates T cell tolerance and controls resolution of inflammation. PD-L1 expression by host tissues is a protective mechanism against damage directed towards healthy tissues. For example, PD-L1 is upregulated by beta-islets in the context of T1D102, as well as by astrocytes and microglia/macrophages in the brains of patients with MS103,104. This pathway’s critical importance is apparent in PD-1/PD-L1-deficient mice, which develop severe spontaneous autoimmunity on autoimmune-prone backgrounds (NOD and MRL)105,106. In addition to protecting against autoimmunity due to its effects on autoreactive CD8+ T cells107, the PD-1 pathway is critical for preventing excess damage in the context of chronic viral infection: LCMV clone 13 infection is lethal in PD-1-pathway-deficient mice at doses that are non-lethal for wild-type mice43. This is due to unchecked perforin-mediated destruction of endothelial cells leading to circulatory collapse108.
Whereas PD-1 is transiently expressed on CD8+ T cells during the early response to acute viral infection and downregulated upon viral clearance, chronic infection and cancer cause high, sustained PD-1 expression on exhausted CD8+ T cells43. Early in chronic infection, expression is highest on TCF1+ progenitor exhausted CD8+ T cells109, while later, expression becomes highest on TIM3+ cells11,85, particularly on the CD101+ terminal exhausted subset93. These temporal changes in relative PD-1 expression indicate that PD-1 may have distinct roles at various stages of the development of T cell exhaustion.
High levels of PD-1 expression contribute to the characteristic dysfunction seen in exhausted CD8+ T cells. PD-1 negatively regulates proliferation and effector function (cytokine production and cytotoxicity) at the functional and transcriptional level43,110. PD-1 blockade can transiently ameliorate these functional deficits43,110, but it does not enhance the memory potential of the exhausted CD8+ T cells110. Interestingly, while PD-1-deficient CD8+ T cells show enhanced proliferation early during the course of chronic viral infection, this effect is accompanied by increased apoptosis and more profound deficits in cytokine production111, illustrating a critical role for PD-1 in the maintenance of T cell functionality and persistence. During acute infection, PD-1 also plays a role in proper memory formation112,113, highlighting the importance of early PD-1 signals in the long-term maintenance of T cell populations.
Therapeutic modulation of PD-1 was first demonstrated in the context of LCMV clone 13: blockade of the PD-1 pathway resulted in lower viral titers across tissues43. Antibody-based PD-1 pathway blockade is now a Food and Drug Administration–approved therapy for many tumor types114 and has a demonstrated positive effect on numerous clinical indicators, particularly long-term survival115. Murine tumor models have demonstrated that PD-1 blockade specifically promotes proliferation and differentiation from progenitor exhausted to terminal exhausted T cells11. Correspondingly, in human tumors, a higher proportion of progenitor exhausted cells was associated with a greater likelihood of response to checkpoint blockade116. While PD-1 blockade therapies have been successful in multiple tumor types, immune-mediated side effects, termed immune-related adverse events (irAEs), can limit their efficacy. There are many unresolved questions about how irAEs arise and their connection to classical autoimmunity (reviewed in Box 3).
Given the role of the PD-1/PD-L1 pathway in mediating T cell tolerance, the induction of tolerance through the administration of checkpoint agonists is currently being investigated for the treatment of autoimmune disease. PD-1 agonism with PD-L1 has shown efficacy in a variety of preclinical animal models, including colitis mediated by dextran sulfate sodium or adoptive T cell transfer117, psoriasis118, experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis119, lupus120 and collagen-induced arthritis121.
Regulation of T cell dysfunction by TOX
While many transcription factors play important roles in CD8+ T cell biology, TOX has recently become of particular interest to the field of exhaustion. TOX is expressed at high levels by exhausted CD8+ T cells in chronic infection and cancer, particularly at later time points, but is largely absent from naive CD8+ T cells and acute-infection-induced CD8+ T cell populations (effector and memory)9,92,122,123. Overexpression of TOX is sufficient to recapitulate a significant fraction of exhaustion-associated gene expression changes, both in naive CD8+ T cells and in fibroblasts9,122. Most strikingly, TOX-deficient T cells are unable to persist in chronic infection and tumor models9,122, suggesting that exhaustion is an adaptation for T cells to survive in an environment of chronic antigen stimulation.
In the context of autoimmunity, TOX may play a role in controlling the pathogenicity and maintenance of self-reactive CD8+ T cells. In murine models of CNS autoimmunity, TOX expression is increased in encephalitogenic CD8+ T cells, and TOX-deficient T cells exhibit reduced encephalitogenic potential, cytokine production and persistence67,68. TOX is also expressed by a subset of T cells in the pancreas of aged NOD mice, and the TOX locus shows increased chromatin accessibility within a subset of beta-islet-specific CD8+ T cells from humans with T1D70,96. Further work is needed to understand the signals driving TOX expression in autoimmunity and the disease-modifying impact that TOX+ subsets confer. It remains unclear whether TOX promotes T cell persistence and maintenance of cytotoxic function or promotes the development of exhaustion to reduce cytotoxicity and maintain tolerance.
Epigenetic regulation of CD8+ T cell dysfunction
Along with the expression of transcription factors, a cell regulates when and how much of a gene transcript is expressed through epigenetic regulatory mechanisms. There are many types of epigenetic regulation, but thus far CD8+ T cells in exhaustion and autoimmunity have primarily been characterized in terms of chromatin accessibility, DNA methylation and histone modifications that affect the rate of transcription of genes.
Recent advances in epigenomic profiling have revealed that exhausted CD8+ T cells in chronic infection and cancer have a distinct epigenetic landscape as compared to other CD8+ T cell states. In both LCMV clone 13 and tumor contexts, progenitor and terminal exhausted subsets show significant chromatin accessibility differences from naive, effector and memory populations11,51,110,124,125. These findings are conserved in human disease contexts: exhaustion-associated chromatin accessible regions from human CD8+ T cells in HIV and HCV infection significantly overlap with orthologous regions from T cells isolated from LCMV clone 13 infection (ref. 124). This distinct epigenetic profile develops early: exhausted versus effector CD8+ T cell chromatin accessibility patterns diverge by day 7 of LCMV clone 13 infection110,124, as do H3K27 acetylation patterns1, a histone modification marking active promoters/enhancers. These epigenetic changes have transcriptional consequences: multiple regions near the Tox locus show significant increases in chromatin accessibility as well as H3K27 acetylation, consistent with increased Tox expression specifically in exhausted cells.
DNA methylation profiling also reveals distinctions between exhausted CD8+ cells and naive, effector or memory T cells. While naive CD8+ T cells are highly methylated, corresponding to a state of relative transcriptional quiescence, many regions become demethylated in the effector state and remain demethylated in memory CD8+ T cells. By contrast, a significant portion of effector demethylated regions become remethylated in exhausted cells, which could represent a mechanism to reduce gene expression and consequent effector function in chronic stimulation contexts126. Interestingly, the inverse of this pattern occurs at regulatory regions near the PD-1 locus (CR-B and CR-C); these regions become remethylated in memory T cells but remain demethylated in exhausted T cells from LCMV clone 13 infection, consistent with sustained elevated PD-1 expression. This pattern is also seen at orthologous loci in human CD8+ T cells when comparing cells in chronic viral infections (Epstein–Barr virus- and cytomegalovirus-specific) to memory cells (yellow fever virus–specific)127.
Recent studies suggest that both encephalitogenic and diabetogenic CD8+ T cells also exhibit distinct epigenetic profiles as compared to naive, effector or memory T cells. Beta-islet-specific CD8+ T cells were tetramer-sorted from the blood of patients with T1D for whole-genome methylation analysis. These profiles were compared with the methylation profiles of sorted naive (CCR7+CD45RO−CD45RA+CD95−), stem cell memory (CCR7+CD45RO−CD95+), central memory (CCR7+CD45RO+) and effector memory (CCR7−CD45RO+) cells from patients with T1D and healthy controls, as well as exhausted tetramer+ T cells from the blood of patients with HIV. The methylation profile of tetramer+ T1D T cells most closely resembled that of stem cell memory cells, with both naive-associated and effector-associated features, including demethylation at PRF1, GZMK, IFNG and TBX21. Analysis by single-cell assay of transposase-accessible chromatin using sequencing (scATAC-seq) confirmed that this hybrid epigenetic profile coexists in a subset of T cells. In the NOD T1D mouse model, the methylation profile of beta-islet-specific CD8+ T cells varied between tissue compartments: the epigenetic profile of tetramer+ T cells in the pancreas was distinct from that of effector memory T cells and most comparable to that of exhausted P14 T cells isolated from mice with LCMV clone 13 infection, while splenic tetramer+ cells shared epigenetic characteristics of both effector memory and central memory T cells96. This location-based difference mirrors a bias seen in exhausted subsets from chronic viral infection: progenitor exhausted cells (which relatively enrich for memory signatures) tend to reside in lymphoid organs, while terminal exhausted cells tend to reside in non-lymphoid tissues85. Chromatin accessibility profiling has also revealed epigenetic features of exhaustion in encephalitogenic CD8+ T cells in a murine model of CNS autoimmunity. In mice expressing the LCMV glycoprotein in myelin-forming CNS cells (MOG-GP mice), infection with an attenuated LCMV variant initiates antigen-specific CD8+ T cell–mediated neurologic disease, whereas in WT mice, it causes a transient choriomeningitis that resolves by day 10. At day 21 post-infection, antigen-specific CD8+ T cells from the CNS of autoimmune MOG-GP mice, as compared to matched cells from infected wild-type mice, exhibited increased chromatin accessibility at a majority of exhaustion-associated chromatin accessible regions68. These data suggest that autoreactive CD8+ T cells exist in a stem-like state in the blood and lymphoid organs but develop epigenetic features of exhaustion upon infiltration into the target organ.
Beyond deepening our understanding of CD8+ T cell state and heterogeneity, epigenetic profiling also has the potential to reveal mechanisms of existing therapies and to offer new therapeutic strategies. Despite its important clinical utility, PD-1 blockade does not alter the exhausted epigenetic profile of T cells, as demonstrated by chromatin accessibility profiling10,11,110 and methylation profiling126. This finding reinforces our understanding of the mechanism of action of PD-1 blockade as promoting proliferation and differentiation from progenitor to terminal exhausted. Reversing exhaustion-associated epigenetic changes may represent a new class of therapeutics to augment T cell functionality in cancer and chronic viral infection. Consistent with this concept, genetic or pharmacologic inhibition of exhaustion-associated enhanced remethylation can increase CD8+ T cell numbers as well as effector function. This treatment synergizes with anti-PD-L1 blockade to further improve control of LCMV clone 13 infection and tumor growth126.
Conclusion and future perspectives
In an acute infection, a productive CD8+ T cell response is generated, characterized by appropriate effector function (leading to clearance of the pathogen) followed by relative CD8+ T cell quiescence in the memory state, with minimal damage to self-tissue. By comparison, CD8+ T cells develop dysfunctional states in response to chronic antigen stimulation in the context of cancer, chronic infection and autoimmunity. Autoimmunity and chronic viral infection/cancer are traditionally exemplified as the pathological consequences at opposite ends of a spectrum of CD8+ T cell functionality (Fig. 1). Despite the distinct consequences of reduced T cell effector function in chronic infection and cancer as compared to sustained effector function in the context of autoimmunity, CD8+ T cells exhibit some key similarities across these conditions (Fig. 2). Notably, both mouse and human CD8+ T cells in these different contexts share some molecular programming at both the transcriptional and epigenetic levels. Recent work suggests that exhaustion-like states may be found in an even broader set of pathological states, including infections such as SARS-CoV-2 (ref. 128).
While much has been learned about the dysfunctional states in chronic infection, cancer and autoimmunity, there are still critical gaps in our knowledge. TCR affinity and self-antigen-specific T cell responses are well studied in the context of autoimmunity but have been less well studied in the context of cancer, with most work focused on neoantigen responses. Self-antigen responses may have important potential relevance to checkpoint-therapy-induced irAEs. Moreover, our understanding of the function of non-specific ‘bystander’ CD8+ T cells in contexts of chronic antigen stimulation is limited. Intriguingly, ‘bystander’ CD8+ T cells that do not recognize the relevant self-antigen have the potential to inhibit an autoimmune response129. Although non-reactive bystander cells have also been identified in tumors10,130,131, their role in anti-tumor responses is unknown.
Likewise, while exhausted subsets have been defined epigenetically, transcriptionally and functionally in cancer and chronic viral infection, CD8+ T cell heterogeneity on these three levels remains incompletely explored in autoimmunity. Further research using clonotype, epigenetic and single-cell analyses is needed to define the presence and significance of exhausted and stem-like T cell subsets in a broader set of autoimmune diseases. It is not yet clear whether exhausted autoreactive CD8+ T cells in T1D remain important effectors of tissue destruction or whether a progenitor exhausted subset may be responsible for the sustained production of terminal exhausted effectors. Alternatively, exhausted autoreactive CD8+ T cells may represent a minority population that does not effectively mediate tissue destruction in the autoimmune pancreas. If so, it could be desirable to induce a more widespread, profound and durable state of exhaustion with strategies such as PD-1 agonism to ameliorate autoimmune disease.
In contexts of exhaustion, we are still working to disentangle what constitutes features of dysfunction versus preservation of residual function. Exhausted CD8+ T cells in chronic infection and cancer are regulated by a set of complex mechanisms intended to maintain homeostasis, which includes protection against pathogens and cancer as well as protection from aberrant self-destruction. Genetic deletion of the dysfunction-associated molecules PD-1 and TOX in exhausted contexts results in a transient increase in proliferation/effector function but dramatically reduces T cell persistence. Conversely, loss of effector-associated transcription factors (IRF4) promotes the maintenance of T cell functionality and persistence at the cost of reduced cell numbers132. These findings suggest that T cell exhaustion may represent a trade-off between proliferation and cellular persistence/maintenance of function in a chronic immunostimulatory environment.
In all three contexts, epigenetics is an area that requires a deeper understanding of the biology and consequent therapeutic implications. As we come to appreciate the importance of multiple subsets with distinct roles in development and maintenance of exhaustion and autoimmune disease processes, more work is also needed to understand the epigenetic landscape of dysfunction over time and at the single-cell level. Such epigenetic profiling studies may provide mechanistic insight into the capabilities of exhausted and autoreactive T cell subpopulations. As epigenetic modulation provides finer tuning of gene expression, modulating dysfunction-associated epigenetic features may permit the amelioration of dysfunctional aspects without perturbing appropriate effector and memory functionality. More broadly, further investigation into the similarities and differences in CD8+ T cell fate decisions and dysfunction across autoimmunity, chronic infection and cancer will provide critical insight into the remarkably diverse roles of T cells in health and disease and reveal new therapeutic strategies.
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Acknowledgements
A.H.S. received funding from the National Institutes of Health, grants P01 AI56299, P01AI039671 and P01 AI108545. S.A.W. received funding from the National Institutes of Health, award T32GM007753.
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J.L.C., S.A.W., K.E.P., D.R.S. and A.H.S. conceived and wrote the manuscript.
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A.H.S. has patents/pending royalties on the PD-1 pathway from Roche and Novartis. A.H.S. is on advisory boards for Surface Oncology, Elstar, SQZ Biotechnologies, Elpiscience, Selecta, Bicara and Monopteros, GlaxoSmithKline and Janssen, and consults for Novartis. A.H.S. has received research funding from Novartis, Roche, UCB, Ipsen, Quark, Merck and AbbVie unrelated to this project.
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Collier, J.L., Weiss, S.A., Pauken, K.E. et al. Not-so-opposite ends of the spectrum: CD8+ T cell dysfunction across chronic infection, cancer and autoimmunity. Nat Immunol 22, 809–819 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41590-021-00949-7
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41590-021-00949-7
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