TIGIT regulates apoptosis of risky memory T cell subsets implicated in belatacept-resistant rejection.
He SunChristina R HartiganChing-Wen ChenYini SunMarvi TariqJennifer M RobertsonScott M KrummeyAneesh K MehtaMandy L FordPublished in: American journal of transplantation : official journal of the American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons (2021)
Belatacept confers increased patient and graft survival in renal transplant recipients relative to calcineurin inhibitors, but is associated with an increased rate of acute rejection. Recent immunophenotypic studies comparing pretransplant T cell phenotypes of patients who reject versus those who remain stable on belatacept identified three potential "risky" memory T cell subsets that potentially underlie belatacept-resistant rejection: CD4+ CD28+ TEM , CD8+ CD28null , and CD4+ CD57+ PD1- subsets. Here, we compared key phenotypic and functional aspects of these human memory T cell subsets, with the goal of identifying additional potential targets to modulate them. Results demonstrate that TIGIT, an increasingly well-appreciated immune checkpoint receptor, was expressed on all three risky memory T cell subsets in vitro and in vivo in the presence of belatacept. Coculture of human memory CD4+ and CD8+ T cells with an agonistic anti-TIGIT mAb significantly increased apoptotic cell death of all three risky memory T cell subsets. Mechanistically, TIGIT-mediated apoptosis of risky memory T cells was dependent on FOXP3+ Treg, suggesting that agonism of the TIGIT pathway increases FOXP3+ Treg suppression of human memory T cell populations. Overall, these data suggest that TIGIT agonism could represent a new therapeutic target to inhibit belatacept-resistant rejection during transplantation.