Mitochondrial arginase-2 is a cell‑autonomous regulator of CD8+ T cell function and antitumor efficacy

Adrià-Arnau Martí i Líndez(University of Geneva), Isabelle Dunand-Sauthier(University of Geneva), Mark Conti(University of Geneva), Florian Gobet(University of Geneva), Nicolás Gonzalo Núñez(University of Zurich), J. Thomas Hannich(University of Geneva), Howard Riezman(University of Geneva), Roger Geiger(Università della Svizzera italiana), Alessandra Piersigilli(University of Bern), Kerstin Hahn(University of Bern), Sylvain Lemeille(University of Geneva), Burkhard Becher(University of Zurich), Thibaut De Smedt(University of Geneva), Stéphanie Hugues(University of Geneva), Walter Reith(University of Geneva)
JCI Insight
November 21, 2019
Cited by 100Open Access
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Abstract

As sufficient extracellular arginine is crucial for T cell function, depletion of extracellular arginine by elevated arginase 1 (Arg1) activity has emerged as a hallmark immunosuppressive mechanism. However, the potential cell-autonomous roles of arginases in T cells have remained unexplored. Here, we show that the arginase isoform expressed by T cells, the mitochondrial Arg2, is a cell-intrinsic regulator of CD8+ T cell activity. Both germline Arg2 deletion and adoptive transfer of Arg2-/- CD8+ T cells significantly reduced tumor growth in preclinical cancer models by enhancing CD8+ T cell activation, effector function, and persistence. Transcriptomic, proteomic, and high-dimensional flow cytometry characterization revealed a CD8+ T cell-intrinsic role of Arg2 in modulating T cell activation, antitumor cytoxicity, and memory formation, independently of extracellular arginine availability. Furthermore, specific deletion of Arg2 in CD8+ T cells strongly synergized with PD-1 blockade for the control of tumor growth and animal survival. These observations, coupled with the finding that pharmacologic arginase inhibition accelerates activation of ex vivo human T cells, unveil Arg2 as a potentially new therapeutic target for T cell-based cancer immunotherapies.


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