Inhibitory PD-1 axis maintains high-avidity stem-like CD8 T cells.
1/5 보강
Stem-like progenitors are self-renewing cytotoxic T cells that expand as effector cells during successful checkpoint immunotherapy.
APA
Hor JL, Schrom EC, et al. (2026). Inhibitory PD-1 axis maintains high-avidity stem-like CD8 T cells.. Nature, 649(8095), 194-204. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09440-x
MLA
Hor JL, et al.. "Inhibitory PD-1 axis maintains high-avidity stem-like CD8 T cells.." Nature, vol. 649, no. 8095, 2026, pp. 194-204.
PMID
41299179
Abstract
Stem-like progenitors are self-renewing cytotoxic T cells that expand as effector cells during successful checkpoint immunotherapy. Emerging evidence suggests that tumour-draining lymph nodes support the continuous generation of these stem-like cells that replenish tumour sites and are a key source of expanded effector populations, underlining the importance of understanding what factors promote and maintain activated T cells in the stem-like state. Here, using advanced three-dimensional multiplex immunofluorescence imaging, we identify antigen-presentation niches in tumour-draining lymph nodes that support the expansion, maintenance and affinity evolution of TCF-1PD-1SLAMF6 stem-like CD8 T cells. Contrary to the prevailing view that persistent T cell receptor (TCR) signalling drives terminal effector differentiation, prolonged antigen engagement days beyond initial priming sustains the proliferation and self-renewal of these stem-like T cells in vivo. The inhibitory PD-1 pathway has a central role in this process through fine-tuning the TCR signal input that enables the selective expansion of high-affinity TCR stem-like clones as a renewable source of effector cells. PD-1 blockade disrupts this tuning, leading to terminal differentiation or death of the most avid anti-tumour stem-like cells. Our results therefore reveal a relationship between TCR ligand affinity recognition, a key negative-feedback regulatory loop and T cell stemness programming. Furthermore, these findings raise questions about whether anti-PD-1 blockade during cancer immunotherapy provides a short-term anti-tumour effect at the cost of diminishing efficacy due to progressive loss of these critical high-affinity precursors.
MeSH Terms
Programmed Cell Death 1 Receptor; Animals; Mice; CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes; Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell; Female; Signal Transduction; Lymph Nodes; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Cell Differentiation; Male; Cell Proliferation; Hepatocyte Nuclear Factor 1-alpha; Lymphocyte Activation; Humans