PD1 inhibits PKCθ-dependent phosphorylation of cytoskeleton-related proteins and immune synapse formation

•PD1 inhibits PKCθ synaptic localization and phosphorylation of its cytoskeleton targets, leading to formation of smaller immune synapses.•Reduced Vimentin phosphorylation on S39 is a putative marker for PD1 engagement in T cells in a PDL1+ tumor microenvironment. [Display omitted] The inhibitory su...

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Veröffentlicht in:Blood advances 2024-06, Vol.8 (11), p.2908-2923
Hauptverfasser: Chmiest, Daniela, Podavini, Silvia, Ioannidou, Kalliopi, Vallois, David, Décaillet, Chantal, Gonzalez, Montserrat, Quadroni, Manfredo, Blackney, Kevin, Schairer, Rebekka, de Leval, Laurence, Thome, Margot
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•PD1 inhibits PKCθ synaptic localization and phosphorylation of its cytoskeleton targets, leading to formation of smaller immune synapses.•Reduced Vimentin phosphorylation on S39 is a putative marker for PD1 engagement in T cells in a PDL1+ tumor microenvironment. [Display omitted] The inhibitory surface receptor programmed cell death protein 1 (PD1) is a major target for antibody–based cancer immunotherapies. Nevertheless, a substantial number of patients fail to respond to the treatment or experience adverse effects. An improved understanding of intracellular pathways targeted by PD1 is thus needed to develop better predictive and prognostic biomarkers. Here, via unbiased phosphoproteome analysis of primary human T cells, we demonstrate that PD1 triggering inhibited the phosphorylation and physical association with protein kinase Cθ (PKCθ) of a variety of cytoskeleton-related proteins. PD1 blocked activation and recruitment of PKCθ to the forming immune synapse (IS) in a Src homology-2 domain–containing phosphatase-1/2 (SHP1/SHP2)-dependent manner. Consequently, PD1 engagement led to impaired synaptic phosphorylation of cytoskeleton-related proteins and formation of smaller IS. T-cell receptor induced phosphorylation of the PKCθ substrate and binding partner vimentin was long-lasting and it could be durably inhibited by PD1 triggering. Vimentin phosphorylation in intratumoral T cells also inversely correlated with the levels of the PD1 ligand, PDL1, in human lung carcinoma. Thus, PKCθ and its substrate vimentin represent important targets of PD1-mediated T-cell inhibition, and low levels of vimentin phosphorylation may serve as a biomarker for the activation of the PD1 pathway.
ISSN:2473-9529
2473-9537
2473-9537
DOI:10.1182/bloodadvances.2023011901