Pik3ip1/TrIP Regulation of PI3K Restricts CD8 T Cell Anti-Tumor Immunity

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Abstract

Background

The protein PI3K-interacting protein (PIK3IP1), or transmembrane inhibitor of PI3K (TrIP), is highly expressed by T cells and can modulate PI3K activity in these cells. Several studies have also revealed that TrIP is rapidly downregulated following T cell activation and can play important roles in T cell differentiation.

Methods

We generated mice with CD8-specific TrIP deficiency. We then implanted these mice, and Cre-only control animals, with B16 melanoma or MC38 colon carcinoma tumors. Tumor growth and anti-tumor immunity were then followed. We also assessed the effects of TrIP deficiency on transcriptional programs in CD8 T cells stimulated in vivo or derived from tumor- bearing mice.

Results

We found that activated TrIP KO CD8 T cells display an increased inflammatory transcriptional profile in the absence of TrIP. Consistent with these effects, we also found that knockout of TrIP specifically in CD8 T cells resulted in reduced growth of syngeneic tumors. When characterizing the tumor-infiltrating cells, TrIP KO led to an increase in the number of tumor-infiltrating T cells, as well as a delay in the acquisition of an exhausted phenotype, based on phenotypic and transcriptomic analyses. Finally, our data suggest that TrIP regulates the diversity of T cell clonal responses to tumors, since we observed an increase in the number of distinct T cell clonotypes responding to a tumor neoantigen.

Conclusions

Taken together, our findings demonstrate that TrIP intrinsically restricts the CD8 T cell response to tumors, and that targeting TrIP may augment the anti-tumor response in a way that is distinct from established checkpoint therapies.

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