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In vitro modeling of CD8 + T cell exhaustion enables CRISPR screening to reveal a role for BHLHE40.

Jennifer E WuSasikanth ManneShin Foong NgiowAmy E BaxterHua HuangElizabeth FreilichMegan L ClarkJoanna H LeeZeyu ChenOmar KhanRyan P StaupeYinghui Jane HuangJunwei ShiJosephine R GilesE John Wherry
Published in: Science immunology (2023)
Identifying molecular mechanisms of exhausted CD8 T cells (T ex ) is a key goal of improving immunotherapy of cancer and other diseases. However, high-throughput interrogation of in vivo T ex can be costly and inefficient. In vitro models of T ex are easily customizable and quickly generate high cellular yield, enabling CRISPR screening and other high-throughput assays. We established an in vitro model of chronic stimulation and benchmarked key phenotypic, functional, transcriptional, and epigenetic features against bona fide in vivo T ex . We leveraged this model of in vitro chronic stimulation in combination with CRISPR screening to identify transcriptional regulators of T cell exhaustion. This approach identified several transcription factors, including BHLHE40. In vitro and in vivo validation defined a role for BHLHE40 in regulating a key differentiation checkpoint between progenitor and intermediate T ex subsets. By developing and benchmarking an in vitro model of T ex , then applying high-throughput CRISPR screening, we demonstrate the utility of mechanistically annotated in vitro models of T ex .
Keyphrases
  • high throughput
  • genome wide
  • genome editing
  • crispr cas
  • transcription factor
  • single cell
  • gene expression
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • heat shock
  • squamous cell
  • young adults