Login / Signup

Not-so-opposite ends of the spectrum: CD8+ T cell dysfunction across chronic infection, cancer and autoimmunity.

Jenna L CollierSarah A WeissKristen E PaukenDebattama R SenArlene H Sharpe
Published in: Nature immunology (2021)
CD8+ T cells are critical mediators of cytotoxic effector function in infection, cancer and autoimmunity. In cancer and chronic viral infection, CD8+ T cells undergo a progressive loss of cytokine production and cytotoxicity, a state termed T cell exhaustion. In autoimmunity, autoreactive CD8+ T cells retain the capacity to effectively mediate the destruction of host tissues. Although the clinical outcome differs in each context, CD8+ T cells are chronically exposed to antigen in all three. These chronically stimulated CD8+ T cells share some common phenotypic features, as well as transcriptional and epigenetic programming, across disease contexts. A better understanding of these CD8+ T cell states may reveal novel strategies to augment clearance of chronic viral infection and cancer and to mitigate self-reactivity leading to tissue damage in autoimmunity.
Keyphrases
  • papillary thyroid
  • squamous cell
  • gene expression
  • lymph node metastasis
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • transcription factor
  • immune response
  • regulatory t cells
  • celiac disease
  • drug induced
  • type iii