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T cells play a critical role in tumor immunosurveillance by eliminating newly transformed somatic cells. However, tumor cell variants can escape from immunological control after immunoediting, leading to tumor progression. Whether and how T cells respond to tumor growth remain unclear. Here, we found that tumor-infiltrating T cells exhibited persistently up-regulated expression of the activator protein 1 (AP-1) subunit c-Fos during tumor progression. The ectopic expression of c-Fos in T cells exacerbated tumor growth, whereas the T-cell-specific deletion of c-Fos reduced tumor malignancy. This unexpected immunosuppressive effect of c-Fos was mediated through the induced expression of immune inhibitory receptor programmed death 1 (PD-1) via the direct binding of c-Fos to the AP-1-binding site in the Pdcd1 (gene encoding PD-1) promoter. A knock-in mutation of this binding site abrogated PD-1 induction, augmented antitumor T-cell function and repressed tumor growth. Taken together, these findings indicate that T-cell c-Fos subsequently induces PD-1 expression in response to tumor progression and that disrupting such induction is essential for repression of tumor growth.
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Gang Xiao
Southern University of Science and Technology
Anqi Deng
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Haifeng Liu
China National Nuclear Corporation
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences
Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science
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Xiao et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d7d07e3b601d7be3ae30e9 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1206370109
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