Human cytomegalovirus expands a CD8(+) T cell population with loss of BCL11B expression and gain of NK cell identity Journal Article


Authors: Sottile, R.; Panjwani, M. K.; Lau, C. M.; Daniyan, A. F.; Tanaka, K.; Barker, J. N.; Brentjens, R. J.; Sun, J. C.; Le Luduec, J. B.; Hsu, K. C.
Article Title: Human cytomegalovirus expands a CD8(+) T cell population with loss of BCL11B expression and gain of NK cell identity
Abstract: CD8+ T cells not only are critical mediators of adaptive immunity but also may exhibit innate-like properties such as surface expression of NKG2C, an activating receptor typically associated with natural killer (NK) cells. We demonstrate that, similar to NK cells, NKG2C+TCRαβ+CD8+ T cells are associated with prior human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) exposure. In addition to expressing several NK cell markers such as CD56 and KIR, NKG2C+CD8+ T cells are oligoclonal and do not up-regulate PD-1 even in response to persistent activation. Furthermore, we found that NKG2C+CD8+ T cells from some individuals exhibited strong effector function against leukemia cells and HCMV-infected fibroblasts, which was dictated by both NKG2C and TCR specificity. Transcriptomic analysis revealed that the transcription factor BCL11B, a regulator of T cell developmental fate, is down-regulated in NKG2C+CD8+ T cells when compared with conventional NKG2C−CD8+ T cells. BCL11B deletion in conventional CD8+ T cells resulted in the emergence of a similar innate-like CD56+CD94+DAP12+NKG2C+CD45RA+CCR7−PD-1−/low T cell population with activity against HLA-E+ targets. On the basis of their intrinsic capacity to recognize diseased cells coupled with lack of PD-1 induction, NKG2C+CD8+ T cells represent a lymphocyte population that resides at the boundary between innate and adaptive immunity, presenting an attractive alternative for cellular therapy, including CAR T cell–based therapies. Copyright © 2021 The Authors
Keywords: controlled study; protein expression; unclassified drug; human cell; gene deletion; nonhuman; cd8+ t lymphocyte; gene; gene expression; cell maturation; transcription factor; cell population; transcriptomics; leukemia cell; fibroblast; natural killer cell; natural killer cell receptor; innate immunity; down regulation; upregulation; adaptive immunity; chemokine receptor ccr7; cytomegalovirus infection; lymphocyte function; cd45ra antigen; programmed death 1 receptor; lymphocyte subpopulation; cd56 antigen; human cytomegalovirus; cd94 antigen; human; article; transcription factor bcl11b; killer cell activating receptor associated protein; natural killer cell receptor nkg2c; bcl11b gene
Journal Title: Science Immunology
Volume: 6
Issue: 63
ISSN: 2470-9468
Publisher: Amer Assoc Advancement Science  
Date Published: 2021-09-24
Start Page: eabe6968
Language: English
DOI: 10.1126/sciimmunol.abe6968
PUBMED: 34559552
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC8601152
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 2 November 2021 -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Renier J Brentjens
    286 Brentjens
  2. Katharine C Hsu
    184 Hsu
  3. Juliet N Barker
    335 Barker
  4. Joseph C Sun
    131 Sun
  5. Anthony   Daniyan
    31 Daniyan
  6. Colleen M Lau
    25 Lau
  7. Kento Tanaka
    3 TANAKA