CD8(+) T cell-derived CD40L mediates noncanonical cytotoxicity in CD40-expressing cancer cells

Autor/innen

  • P. Schiele
  • A. Sada Japp
  • R. Stark
  • J.J. Sattelberg
  • C. Nikolaou
  • G. Kornhuber
  • P. Abbasi
  • N. Ding
  • S. Rosnev
  • S. Meinke
  • K. Mühle
  • L. Loyal
  • J. Braun
  • M. Dingeldey
  • S. Durlanik
  • N. Matzmohr
  • D. Ponikwicka-Tyszko
  • S. Wolczynski
  • N.A. Rahman
  • I. Taniuchi
  • S. Schlickeiser
  • C. Giesecke-Thiel
  • T. Blankenstein
  • I.K. Na
  • A. Thiel
  • M. Frentsch

Journal

  • Science Advances

Quellenangabe

  • Sci Adv 11 (21): eadr9331

Zusammenfassung

  • T cells and their effector functions, in particular the canonical cytotoxicity of CD8(+) T cells involving perforin, granzymes, Fas ligand (FasL), and tumor necrosis factor related apoptosis inducing ligand (TRAIL), are crucial for tumor immunity. Here, we reveal a previously unidentified mechanism by which CD40L-expressing CD8(+) T cells induce cytotoxicity in cancer cells. In murine models, up to 50% of tumor-specific CD8(+) T cells expressed CD40L, and conditional CD40L ablation in CD8(+) T cells alone led to tumor formation. Mechanistically, CD40L(+)CD8(+) T cells can induce cell death in CD40-expressing cancer cells by triggering caspase-8 activation. We demonstrate that a gene signature for resistance to CD40 signaling-induced cell death strongly correlates with worse survival in different human cancer cohorts. Our results introduce CD40L as a rather counterintuitive, noncanonical cytotoxic factor that complements the capabilities of CD8(+) T cells to combat cancers and has the potential to enhance the efficacy of immunotherapies.


DOI

doi:10.1126/sciadv.adr9331