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  • A Distinct Gene Module for Dysfunction Uncoupled from Activation in Tumor-Infiltrating T Cells.

A Distinct Gene Module for Dysfunction Uncoupled from Activation in Tumor-Infiltrating T Cells.

Cell (2016-09-10)
Meromit Singer, Chao Wang, Le Cong, Nemanja D Marjanovic, Monika S Kowalczyk, Huiyuan Zhang, Jackson Nyman, Kaori Sakuishi, Sema Kurtulus, David Gennert, Junrong Xia, John Y H Kwon, James Nevin, Rebecca H Herbst, Itai Yanai, Orit Rozenblatt-Rosen, Vijay K Kuchroo, Aviv Regev, Ana C Anderson
ABSTRACT

Reversing the dysfunctional T cell state that arises in cancer and chronic viral infections is the focus of therapeutic interventions; however, current therapies are effective in only some patients and some tumor types. To gain a deeper molecular understanding of the dysfunctional T cell state, we analyzed population and single-cell RNA profiles of CD8(+) tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) and used genetic perturbations to identify a distinct gene module for T cell dysfunction that can be uncoupled from T cell activation. This distinct dysfunction module is downstream of intracellular metallothioneins that regulate zinc metabolism and can be identified at single-cell resolution. We further identify Gata-3, a zinc-finger transcription factor in the dysfunctional module, as a regulator of dysfunction, and we use CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing to show that it drives a dysfunctional phenotype in CD8(+) TILs. Our results open novel avenues for targeting dysfunctional T cell states while leaving activation programs intact.

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2-Mercaptoethanol, BioUltra, Molecular Biology, ≥99.0% (GC)