CD8+ T cells become functionally impaired or “exhausted” in chronic infections, accompanied by unwanted body weight reduction and muscle mass loss. Whether muscle regulates T cell exhaustion remains incompletely understood. We report that mouse skeletal muscle increased interleukin (IL)–15 production during LCMV clone 13 chronic infection. Muscle-specific ablation of Il15 enhanced the CD8+ T cell exhaustion phenotype. Muscle-derived IL-15 was required to maintain a population of CD8+CD103+ muscle-infiltrating lymphocytes (MILs). MILs resided in a less inflamed microenvironment, expressed more T cell factor 1 (Tcf1), and had higher proliferative potential than splenic T cells. MILs differentiated into functional effector T cells after reentering lymphoid tissues. Increasing muscle mass via muscle-specific inhibition of TGFβ signaling enhanced IL-15 production and antiviral CD8+ T cell responses. We conclude that skeletal muscle antagonizes T cell exhaustion by protecting T cell proliferative potential from inflammation and replenishing the effector T cell progeny pool in lymphoid organs.
T cells become functionally exhausted in tumors, limiting T cell–based immunotherapies. Although several transcription factors regulating the exhausted T (T ex ) cell differentiation are known, comparatively little is known about the regulators of T ex cell survival. Here, we reported that the regulator of G protein signaling 16 (Rgs-16) suppressed T ex cell survival in tumors. By performing lineage tracing using reporter mice in which mCherry marked Rgs16-expressing cells, we identified that Rgs16 + CD8 + tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) were terminally differentiated, expressed low levels of T cell factor 1 (Tcf1), and underwent apoptosis as early as 6 days after the onset of Rgs16 expression. Rgs16 deficiency inhibited CD8 + T cell apoptosis and promoted antitumor effector functions of CD8 + T cells. Furthermore, Rgs16 deficiency synergized with programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) blockade to enhance antitumor CD8 + T cell responses. Proteomics revealed that Rgs16 interacted with the scaffold protein IQGAP1, suppressed the recruitment of Ras and B-Raf, and inhibited Erk1 activation. Rgs16 deficiency enhanced antitumor CD8 + TIL survival in an Erk1-dependent manner. Loss of function of Erk1 decreased antitumor functions of Rgs16 -deficient CD8 + T cells. RGS16 mRNA expression levels in CD8 + TILs of patients with melanoma negatively correlated with genes associated with T cell stemness, such as SELL , TCF7 , and IL7R , and predicted low responses to PD-1 blockade. This study uncovers Rgs16 as an inhibitor of T ex cell survival in tumors and has implications for improving T cell–based immunotherapies.
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