Systematic Immunotherapy Target Discovery Using Genome-Scale In Vivo CRISPR Screens in CD8 T Cells

Authors
Dong MB, Wang G, Chow RD, Ye L, Zhu L2, Dai X, Park JJ, Kim HR2, Errami Y, Guzman CD, Zhou X, Chen KY, Renauer PA6, Du Y2, Shen J5, Lam SZ5, Zhou JJ5, Lannin DR7, Herbst RS8, Chen S9.
09-04-2019 HSW1057
12:00pm
PST
Categories
High Throughput Discovery
Speaker
Neil Tay
Abstract

CD8 T cells play essential roles in anti-tumor immune responses. Here, we performed genome-scale CRISPR screens in CD8 T cells directly under cancer immunotherapy settings and identified regulators of tumor infiltration and degranulation. The in vivo screen robustly re-identified canonical immunotherapy targets such as PD-1 and Tim-3, along with genes that have not been characterized in T cells. The infiltration and degranulation screens converged on an RNA helicase Dhx37. Dhx37 knockout enhanced the efficacy of antigen-specific CD8 T cells against triple-negative breast cancer in vivo. Immunological characterization in mouse and human CD8 T cells revealed that DHX37 suppresses effector functions, cytokine production, and T cell activation. Transcriptomic profiling and biochemical interrogation revealed a role for DHX37 in modulating NF-κB. These data demonstrate high-throughput in vivo genetic screens for immunotherapy target discovery and establishes DHX37 as a functional regulator of CD8 T cells.