CISH, a key intracellular checkpoint, in comparison and combination to existing and emerging cancer immune checkpoints.
Over the past decade, Immuno-Oncology has largely focused on blocking inhibitory surface receptors like PD-1 to enhance T cell anti-tumor activity.
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