Publications in the Year: 2016

Journal Article

Dogra P, Ghoneim HE, Abdelsamed HA, Youngblood B.  2016.  Generating long-lived CD8(+) T-cell memory: Insights from epigenetic programs.. European journal of immunology. 46(7):1548-62. Abstract

T-cell-based immunological memory has the potential to provide the host with life-long protection against pathogen reexposure and thus offers tremendous promise for the design of vaccines targeting chronic infections or cancer. In order to exploit this potential in the design of new vaccines, it is necessary to understand how and when memory T cells acquire their poised effector potential, and moreover, how they maintain these properties during homeostatic proliferation. To gain insight into the persistent nature of memory T-cell functions, investigators have turned their attention to epigenetic mechanisms. Recent efforts have revealed that many of the properties acquired among memory T cells are coupled to stable changes in DNA methylation and histone modifications. Furthermore, it has recently been reported that the delineating features among memory T cells subsets are also linked to distinct epigenetic events, such as permissive and repressive histone modifications and DNA methylation programs, providing exciting new hypotheses regarding their cellular ancestry. Here, we review recent studies focused on epigenetic programs acquired during effector and memory T-cell differentiation and discuss how these data may shed new light on the developmental path for generating long-lived CD8(+) T-cell memory.

Ghoneim HE, Zamora AE, Thomas PG, Youngblood BA.  2016.  Cell-Intrinsic Barriers of T Cell-Based Immunotherapy.. Trends in molecular medicine. 22(12):1000-1011. Abstract

Prolonged exposure of CD8(+) T cells to their cognate antigen can result in exhaustion of effector functions enabling the persistence of infected or transformed cells. Recent advances in strategies to rejuvenate host effector function using Immune Checkpoint Blockade have resulted in tremendous success towards the treatment of several cancers. However, it is unclear if T cell rejuvenation results in long-lived antitumor functions. Emerging evidence suggests that T cell exhaustion may also represent a significant impediment in sustaining long-lived antitumor activity by chimeric antigen receptor T cells. Here, we discuss current findings regarding transcriptional regulation during T cell exhaustion and address the hypothesis that epigenetics may be a potential barrier to achieving the maximum benefit of T cell-based immunotherapies.

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