FBXO38 mediates PD-1 ubiquitination and regulates anti-tumour immunity of T cells

Xiangbo Meng, Xiwei Liu, Xingdong Guo, Shutan Jiang, Tingting Chen, Zhiqiang Hu, Haifeng Liu, Yibing Bai, Manman Xue, Ronggui Hu, Shao cong Sun, Xiaolong Liu, Penghui Zhou, Xiaowu Huang, Lai Wei, Wei Yang, Chenqi Xu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

171 Scopus citations

Abstract

Dysfunctional T cells in the tumour microenvironment have abnormally high expression of PD-1 and antibody inhibitors against PD-1 or its ligand (PD-L1) have become commonly used drugs to treat various types of cancer1–4. The clinical success of these inhibitors highlights the need to study the mechanisms by which PD-1 is regulated. Here we report a mechanism of PD-1 degradation and the importance of this mechanism in anti-tumour immunity in preclinical models. We show that surface PD-1 undergoes internalization, subsequent ubiquitination and proteasome degradation in activated T cells. FBXO38 is an E3 ligase of PD-1 that mediates Lys48-linked poly-ubiquitination and subsequent proteasome degradation. Conditional knockout of Fbxo38 in T cells did not affect T cell receptor and CD28 signalling, but led to faster tumour progression in mice owing to higher levels of PD-1 in tumour-infiltrating T cells. Anti-PD-1 therapy normalized the effect of FBXO38 deficiency on tumour growth in mice, which suggests that PD-1 is the primary target of FBXO38 in T cells. In human tumour tissues and a mouse cancer model, transcriptional levels of FBXO38 and Fbxo38, respectively, were downregulated in tumour-infiltrating T cells. However, IL-2 therapy rescued Fbxo38 transcription and therefore downregulated PD-1 levels in PD-1+ T cells in mice. These data indicate that FBXO38 regulates PD-1 expression and highlight an alternative method to block the PD-1 pathway.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)130-135
Number of pages6
JournalNature
Volume564
Issue number7734
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 6 2018

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General

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