GSK-3β in Dendritic Cells Exerts Opposite Functions in Regulating Cross-Priming and Memory CD8 T Cell Responses Independent of β-Catenin
Recommended Citation
Fu C, Wang J, Ma T, Yin C, Zhou L, Clausen BE, Mi QS, and Jiang A. GSK-3β in Dendritic Cells Exerts Opposite Functions in Regulating Cross-Priming and Memory CD8 T Cell Responses Independent of β-Catenin. Vaccines (Basel) 2024; 12(9).
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-10-2024
Publication Title
Vaccines (Basel)
Abstract
GSK-3β plays a critical role in regulating the Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway, and manipulating GSK-3β in dendritic cells (DCs) has been shown to improve the antitumor efficacy of DC vaccines. Since the inhibition of GSK-3β leads to the activation of β-catenin, we hypothesize that blocking GSK-3β in DCs negatively regulates DC-mediated CD8 T cell immunity and antitumor immunity. Using CD11c-GSK-3β(-/-) conditional knockout mice in which GSK-3β is genetically deleted in CD11c-expressing DCs, we surprisingly found that the deletion of GSK-3β in DCs resulted in increased antitumor immunity, which contradicted our initial expectation of reduced antitumor immunity due to the presumed upregulation of β-catenin in DCs. Indeed, we found by both Western blot and flow cytometry that the deletion of GSK-3β in DCs did not lead to augmented expression of β-catenin protein, suggesting that GSK-3β exerts its function independent of β-catenin. Supporting this notion, our single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) analysis revealed that GSK-3β-deficient DCs exhibited distinct gene expression patterns with minimally overlapping differentially expressed genes (DEGs) compared to DCs with activated β-catenin. This suggests that the deletion of GSK-3β in DCs is unlikely to lead to upregulation of β-catenin at the transcriptional level. Consistent with enhanced antitumor immunity, we also found that CD11c-GSK-3β(-/-) mice exhibited significantly augmented cross-priming of antigen-specific CD8 T cells following DC-targeted vaccines. We further found that the deletion of GSK-3β in DCs completely abrogated memory CD8 T cell responses, suggesting that GSK-3β in DCs also plays a negative role in regulating the differentiation and/or maintenance of memory CD8 T cells. scRNA-seq analysis further revealed that although the deletion of GSK-3β in DCs positively regulated transcriptional programs for effector differentiation and function of primed antigen-specific CD8 T cells in CD11c-GSK-3β(-/-) mice during the priming phase, it resulted in significantly reduced antigen-specific memory CD8 T cells, consistent with diminished memory responses. Taken together, our data demonstrate that GSK-3β in DCs has opposite functions in regulating cross-priming and memory CD8 T cell responses, and GSK-3β exerts its functions independent of its regulation of β-catenin. These novel insights suggest that targeting GSK-3β in cancer immunotherapies must consider its dual role in CD8 T cell responses.
PubMed ID
39340067
Volume
12
Issue
9