Cytotoxic CD8 + T-cells play central roles in tumor immunotherapy. Understanding the mechanisms that regulate development, differentiation, and functions of cytotoxic CD8 + T-cells leads to the development of better immunotherapies. By combining primary T-cell culture and a syngeneic mouse tumor model with both genome-wide and custom CRISPR/Cas9 screenings, we systematically identified genes and pathways that regulate PD-1 expression and functions of CD8 + T-cells. Among them, inactivation of a key enzyme in glycoconjugate biosynthesis, beta 1,4-galactosyltransferase 1 (B4GALT1), leads to significantly enhanced T-cell receptor (TCR) activation and functions of CD8 + T-cell. Interestingly, suppression of B4GALT1 enhances functions of TCR-T-cells, but has no effect on chimeric antigen receptor T (CAR-T) cells. We systematically identified the substrates of B4GALT1 on CD8 + T-cell surface by affinity purification and mass spectrometry analysis, which include protein components in both TCR and its co-receptor complexes. The galactosylation of TCR and CD8 leads to reduced interaction between TCR and CD8 that is essential for TCR activation. Artificially tethering TCR and CD8 by a TCR-CD8 fusion protein could bypass the regulation of B4GALT1 in CD8 + T-cells. Finally, the expression levels of B4GALT1 normalized to tumor-infiltrated CD8 + T-cells in tumor microenvironment are significant and negatively associated with prognosis of human patients. Our results reveal the important roles of protein N-glycosylation in regulating functions of CD8 + T-cells and prove that B4GALT1 is a potential target for tumor immunotherapy.
Hong et al. (Fri,) studied this question.