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Publication | Open Access

XCR1+ DCs are critical for T cell-mediated immunotherapy of chronic viral infections

22

Citations

79

References

2023

Year

Abstract

The contribution of cross-presenting XCR1+ dendritic cells (DCs) and SIRPα+ DCs in maintaining T cell function during exhaustion and immunotherapeutic interventions of chronic infections remains poorly characterized. Using the mouse model of chronic LCMV infection, we found that XCR1+ DCs are more resistant to infection and highly activated compared with SIRPα+ DCs. Exploiting XCR1+ DCs via Flt3L-mediated expansion or XCR1-targeted vaccination notably reinvigorates CD8+ T cells and improves virus control. Upon PD-L1 blockade, XCR1+ DCs are not required for the proliferative burst of progenitor exhausted CD8+ T (T<sub>PEX</sub>) cells but are indispensable to sustain the functionality of exhausted CD8+ T (T<sub>EX</sub>) cells. Combining anti-PD-L1 therapy with increased frequency of XCR1+ DCs improves functionality of T<sub>PEX</sub> and T<sub>EX</sub> subsets, while increase of SIRPα+ DCs dampened their proliferation. Together, this demonstrates that XCR1+ DCs are crucial for the success of checkpoint inhibitor-based therapies through differential activation of exhausted CD8+ T cell subsets.

References

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