Checkpoint TIPE2 Limits the Helper Functions of NK Cells in Supporting Antitumor CD8 + T Cells.
Jiacheng BiXiaomeng JinChaoyue ZhengChen HuangChao ZhongXiaohu ZhengZhigang TianHaoyu SunPublished in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2023)
Natural killer (NK) cells not only are innate effector lymphocytes that directly participate in tumor surveillance but are also essential helpers in the antitumor CD8 + T-cell response. However, the molecular mechanisms and potential checkpoints regulating NK cell helper functions remain elusive. Here, it is shown that the T-bet/Eomes-IFN-γ axis in NK cells is essential for CD8 + T cell-dependent tumor control, whereas T-bet-dependent NK cell effector functions are required for an optimal response to anti-PD-L1 immunotherapy. Importantly, NK cell-expressed TIPE2 (tumor necrosis factor-alpha-induced protein-8 like-2) represents a checkpoint molecule for NK cell helper function, since Tipe2 deletion in NK cells not only enhances NK-intrinsic antitumor activity but also indirectly improves the antitumor CD8 + T cell response by promoting T-bet/Eomes-dependent NK cell effector functions. These studies thus reveal TIPE2 as a checkpoint for NK cell helper function, whose targeting might boost the antitumor T cell response in addition to T cell-based immunotherapy.