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CISH, a key intracellular checkpoint, in comparison and combination to existing and emerging cancer immune checkpoints.

Communications biology 2026 Vol.9(1)

Cano F, Bravo-Blas A, Colombe M, Cerrato C, Venigalla RKC, Preham O, Burns E, Mortimer P, Choudhry A, Slipek N, Johnson MJ, Webber BR, Moriarity BS, Lou E, Choudhry M, Klebanoff CA, Henley T

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Over the past decade, Immuno-Oncology has largely focused on blocking inhibitory surface receptors like PD-1 to enhance T cell anti-tumor activity.

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APA Cano F, Bravo-Blas A, et al. (2026). CISH, a key intracellular checkpoint, in comparison and combination to existing and emerging cancer immune checkpoints.. Communications biology, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-026-09579-x
MLA Cano F, et al.. "CISH, a key intracellular checkpoint, in comparison and combination to existing and emerging cancer immune checkpoints.." Communications biology, vol. 9, no. 1, 2026.
PMID 41580517

Abstract

Over the past decade, Immuno-Oncology has largely focused on blocking inhibitory surface receptors like PD-1 to enhance T cell anti-tumor activity. However, intracellular immune checkpoints such as CISH, which function independently of tumor-expressed ligands, offer powerful and previously untapped therapeutic potential. As a downstream regulator of TCR signaling, CISH controls T cell activation, expansion, and neoantigen reactivity. Though historically considered undruggable, recent advances in CRISPR engineering have enabled functional interrogation of these targets. We demonstrate that CISH deletion enhances T cell activation and anti-cancer functions more effectively than other emerging intracellular checkpoints. In CAR-T cells, CISH inactivation significantly increased sensitivity to tumor antigen, enabling robust recognition and killing even at low antigen levels, conditions that often lead to treatment failure with conventional T cell therapies, mirroring antigen escape scenarios seen in solid tumors. Our findings further validate CISH as a potent and druggable intracellular checkpoint capable of boosting anti-tumor T cell responses across diverse cancer types, independent of PD-L1 status. The underlying mechanisms of CISH inhibition may help explain the positive outcomes reported in recent clinical studies of this approach in solid tumor immunotherapy.

MeSH Terms

Humans; Neoplasms; Animals; Mice; T-Lymphocytes; Lymphocyte Activation; Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors; Antigens, Neoplasm; Immune Checkpoint Proteins; Cell Line, Tumor

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