UFL1 ablation in T cells suppresses PD-1 UFMylation to enhance anti-tumor immunity.

Chuan He, Xixin Xing,Hsin-Yi Chen, Minling Gao, Jie Shi,Bolin Xiang,Xiangling Xiao,Yishuang Sun,Haisheng Yu, Gaoshan Xu, Yingmeng Yao, Zuosong Xie, Yujie Xing,Bugi Ratno Budiarto,Shih-Yu Chen,Yang Gao,Yu-Ru Lee,Jinfang Zhang

Molecular cell(2024)

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摘要
UFMylation is an emerging ubiquitin-like post-translational modification that regulates various biological processes. Dysregulation of the UFMylation pathway leads to human diseases, including cancers. However, the physiological role of UFMylation in T cells remains unclear. Here, we report that mice with conditional knockout (cKO) Ufl1, a UFMylation E3 ligase, in T cells exhibit effective tumor control. Single-cell RNA sequencing analysis shows that tumor-infiltrating cytotoxic CD8+ T cells are increased in Ufl1 cKO mice. Mechanistically, UFL1 promotes PD-1 UFMylation to antagonize PD-1 ubiquitination and degradation. Furthermore, AMPK phosphorylates UFL1 at Thr536, disrupting PD-1 UFMylation to trigger its degradation. Of note, UFL1 ablation in T cells reduces PD-1 UFMylation, subsequently destabilizing PD-1 and enhancing CD8+ T cell activation. Thus, Ufl1 cKO mice bearing tumors have a better response to anti-CTLA-4 immunotherapy. Collectively, our findings uncover a crucial role of UFMylation in T cells and highlight UFL1 as a potential target for cancer treatment.
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