Protein synthesis supports robust immune responses. Nutrient competition and global cell stressors in the tumor microenvironment (TME) may impact protein translation in T cells and antitumor immunity. Using human and mouse tumors, we demonstrated here that protein translation in T cells is repressed in solid tumors. Reduced glucose availability to T cells in the TME led to activation of the unfolded protein response (UPR) element eIF2a. Genetic mouse models revealed that translation attenuation mediated by activated p-eIF2a undermines the ability of T cells to suppress tumor growth. Reprogramming T cell metabolism was able to alleviate p-eIF2a accumulation and translational attenuation in the TME, allowing for sustained protein translation. Metabolic and pharmacological approaches showed that proteasome activity mitigates induction of p-eIF2a to support optimal antitumor T cell function, protecting from translation attenuation and enabling prolonged cytokine synthesis in solid tumors. Together, these data identify a new therapeutic avenue to fuel the efficacy of tumor immunotherapy.
Protein synthesis enables cell growth and survival, but the molecular mechanisms through which T cells suppress or maintain protein translation in the stress of solid tumors are unknown. Using mouse models and human tumors we demonstrate that protein translation in T cells is repressed by the solid tumor microenvironment (TME) due to activation of the unfolded protein response (UPR) via phosphorylation of the α subunit of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2 (p-eIF2α). Given that acute glucose deprivation in T cells exacerbated p-eIF2α, we show that metabolic reprogramming toward glycolytic independence allays the UPR and p-eIF2α, enabling sustained protein translation in T cells in TME stress. UPR mitigation was associated with enhanced degradation of proteins in antitumor T cells, as proteasome inhibition resulted in eIF2α phosphorylation, attenuation of translation, and loss of antitumor efficacy. In contrast, proteasome stimulation relieved translation inhibition, inducing robust T cell tumor control, offering a new therapeutic avenue to fuel the efficacy of tumor immunotherapy.
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