Key Points
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Immunosuppressive pathways or immune checkpoints refer to inhibitory receptors expressed on immune cells that are crucial for maintaining self-tolerance and modulating the length and magnitude of physiological immune responses in peripheral tissues in order to minimize collateral tissue damage.
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Immunosuppressive pathways lead to 'exhausted' T cells, which show inferior effector function and poor recall responses. Many pathogens and malignancies use these pathways to evade immunity.
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Immunotherapy is a type of treatment designed to boost the body's natural immune response to fight disease. It currently uses antibodies made in the laboratory to boost immunity against malignancies but has the potential to treat infectious diseases.
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Malarial pathogenesis was recently shown to be dependent on the programmed cell death protein 1 (PD1) pathway. Targeting this pathway with antibodies or programmed cell death 1 ligand 2 (PDL2) protein has shown protection and thus the potential of immunotherapy as a treatment.
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Immune checkpoint markers may play a role in both HIV and hepatitis B virus (HBV) persistence in individuals on antiviral therapy through increased expression on antigen-specific T cells, limiting immune recognition of infected cells and/or production of antibodies.
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Clinical trials of immune checkpoint blockers in chronic HIV and HBV infection are now starting in individuals with malignancy and will be evaluated in the future as potential strategies to induce remission or allow individuals to safely stop antiviral therapy.
Abstract
The upregulation of immune checkpoint molecules, such as programmed cell death protein 1 (PD1) and cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen 4 (CTLA4), on immune cells occurs during acute infections, such as malaria, as well as during chronic persistent viral infections, including HIV and hepatitis B virus. These pathways are important for preventing immune-driven pathology but can also limit immune-mediated clearance of the infection. The recent success of immune checkpoint blockade in cancer therapy suggests that targeting these pathways would also be effective for preventing and treating a range of infectious diseases. Here, we review our current understanding of immune checkpoint pathways in the pathogenesis of infectious diseases and discuss the potential for therapeutically targeting these pathways in this setting.
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Main
Immune checkpoint molecules are inhibitory receptors expressed on immune cells that trigger immunosuppressive signalling pathways. These molecules are crucial for maintaining self-tolerance and for modulating the length and magnitude of effector immune responses in peripheral tissues to minimize collateral tissue damage1,2. Signalling through these molecules can drive effector immune cells (especially T cells) into a state known as 'exhaustion'. T cell exhaustion is defined by reduced effector function, sustained expression of immune checkpoint molecules (such as programmed cell death protein 1 (PD1)), poor recall responses and a transcriptional state distinct from that of functional effector or memory T cells3. There are numerous types of activating and inhibitory interactions that occur between antigen-presenting cells (APCs) and T cells, and these interactions regulate the nature of immune responses (Fig. 1). It is now clear that many pathogens and cancers promote inhibitory interactions between immune cells through immune checkpoint proteins to escape immune control.
Investigation of these immunosuppressive interactions has led to the clinical development and licensing of new cancer treatments, which increase immune responses by using specific antibodies to block immune checkpoint molecules (Box 1). Antibodies targeting PD1 (pembrolizumab, nivolumab), cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen 4 (CTLA4) (ipilimumab) and programmed cell death 1 ligand 1 (PDL1, also known as B7-H1) (atezolizumab, avelumab and durvalumab) are currently licensed as monotherapies for various types of cancer (Box 2). In addition, combined therapeutic targeting of PD1 and CTLA4 was shown to be more effective than either therapy alone for treatment of melanoma4, although such combination therapy also leads to increased toxicity in patients. Therapies targeting several other immune checkpoint pathways have also shown promise for controlling various types of cancer (Table 1; reviewed in Ref. 2). It is also possible to increase immunity by directly targeting co-stimulatory molecules on T cells with agonistic antibodies (Box 1), and the clinical utility of such treatments is currently being assessed in clinical trials. These antibody-mediated treatments use the individual's own immune system to eliminate or slow the growth of cancer cells and have shown remarkable success in malignancies such as melanoma.
A major challenge in immunotherapy is to understand why treatment responses are variable, and thus there is a search for predictive 'biomarkers' of a favourable clinical response. PDL1 expression on tumour cells can identify patients who would most benefit from PD1 or PDL1 blockade therapy5. There are also more complex 'gene signatures' in tumours that can identify patients who will show the best responses to immunotherapies6. Earlier expansion of T cell populations following anti-PD1 antibody therapy in small-cell lung cancer has been associated with improved responses7, and a composite biomarker of the T cell proliferative response together with pretreatment tumour burden can predict responses to anti-PD1 antibody in individuals with metastatic melanoma8. Given the cost and toxicity of immune checkpoint blockade, identifying biomarkers that predict a clinical response is currently a top priority.
Whether immunotherapies can also be effective for treating infectious diseases is less well explored. However, the fact that these inhibitory pathways are also exploited for immune evasion by pathogens suggests that their blockade could be used for the prevention and treatment of infectious diseases, in either the acute or chronic phases of infection. Currently, checkpoint blockade is being evaluated for reversing T cell exhaustion that follows from chronic infectious disease, but there is potential for also treating acute infections to generate long-term immunity9. The development of vaccines for a range of infectious diseases, including malaria, hepatitis B virus (HBV) and HIV could also potentially be improved through immune checkpoint blockade. Given that drug resistance in malaria10 and many other infections is increasing and that control of both HIV and HBV requires lifelong treatment, new strategies for potentially curing these infections are being considered. Furthermore, parallel searches for biomarkers that will provide information on the best therapy choice as well as indicate if there is a time frame when immunotherapy would be most efficacious are also required. In this Review, we describe in detail the impact of immune checkpoint signalling during malaria, HIV and HBV infections, as well as in tuberculosis (TB), and we discuss the potential for therapeutically targeting these pathways in these settings.
Immune checkpoint proteins in malaria
Malaria is a mosquito-borne infectious disease of humans caused by parasitic protozoans of the genus Plasmodium. The majority of malaria infections are caused by Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax, and in 2015, there were 212 million new cases of malaria worldwide, with 429,000 deaths due to P. falciparum alone11. These parasites have a complex life cycle within the mammalian host, in which a liver stage of infection is followed by asexual and sexual blood stages of infection. The blood stages cause the severe symptoms and high mortality associated with malaria.
Over the past 20 years, more than 100 vaccines have been developed to control malaria, and these have been clinically evaluated. Most vaccines were specifically designed to target liver-stage or blood-stage parasites by inducing protective antibodies and CD4+ T cells, although a few vaccines were designed to generate CD8+ T cell responses against the liver-stage parasites. The best candidate vaccine identified to date is the RTS,S/AS01E vaccine, which will soon be administered to children in Africa; however, this vaccine had an efficacy of only 43.6% in the first year of administration, and efficacy decreased to 16.8% by the fourth year12. This result highlights considerable challenges in developing an effective malaria vaccine and suggests that new strategies that target potential mechanisms of immune evasion by parasites need consideration.
The symptoms of malaria range from asymptomatic to chronic, severe and finally lethal disease. Partial immunity is developed by those living in endemic areas only after repeated malarial infection over several years13,14,15. Protection against malaria is dependent on both cell-mediated and humoral immune responses. Parasites in the liver stage are known to be cleared by cytotoxic CD8+ T cells and possibly CD4+ T cells16. For blood-stage malaria, antibodies have been shown to play a key role in protection, as demonstrated by the transfer of serum from protected adults into children17. Studies in experimental rodent models of malaria have shown that multiple effector responses are required to protect against blood-stage malaria. T helper 1 (TH1) cell responses are critical for controlling the bulk of blood-stage parasites and thus preventing severe disease18,19. Antibodies are required to eliminate the remaining patent parasites20. Recent studies have shown that CD8+ T cells are required for sterile immunity that prevents the acute infection from progressing to chronic malaria21. Antibodies and CD8+ T cells are also required for long-term protection against reinfection22. Studies have also shown that malarial infections caused apoptosis of vaccine-specific memory B cells23 because of compromised dendritic cell (DC) functions24. This could explain why vaccines have not been successful in the field. Several other factors also contribute to short-lived immunity against malaria (reviewed in Ref. 25), but the role of PD1 as a major factor in loss of immunity against malaria has risen to the forefront.
Malaria and T cell exhaustion. As vaccines have been the focus of malaria control, the study of immune checkpoint proteins in malaria infections is fairly new. Field studies in malaria-endemic Mali and Kenya found that individuals recently infected with P. falciparum expressed PD1 on CD4+ (Refs 26,27) and CD8+ T cells27, implicating this molecule in immune evasion. Similarly, an increased proportion of CD4+ T cells from individuals with acute-phase infections with P. vivax, P. falciparum or both had increased expression of CTLA4, OX40 (also known as TNFRSF4), glucocorticoid-induced TNFR-related protein (GITR; also known as TNFRSF18) and CD69 (Ref. 28), suggesting a role for regulatory T (Treg) cells in suppressing immunity to malaria and indicating potential targets of checkpoint control. Finally, expression of the immune checkpoint molecule T cell immunoglobulin mucin receptor 3 (TIM3; also known as HAVCR2) was significantly increased on key populations of lymphocytes in P. falciparum-infected patients29.
There are four mouse models of malaria that display the major symptoms and pathology of human disease and are routinely used to study malarial pathogenesis (Box 3). A definitive role for PD1 in malarial pathogenesis was established when PD1-deficient mice were shown to rapidly and completely clear Plasmodium chabaudi infections, which usually cause chronic malaria in mice21. Notably, during the acute phase of P. chabaudi infection, PD1 was shown to mediate a 95% loss in the numbers and functional capacity of parasite-specific CD8+ T cells, which are required to control chronic disease21.
Recent studies of malaria using four mouse models revealed a novel regulatory function for PDL2 (also known as B7-DC)9. It was shown that whereas PDL1 expressed by DCs did indeed attenuate immune responses against malaria, PDL2 protein expressed on the same DCs improved immune responses by inhibiting PDL1–PD1 interactions9. These studies also showed that PDL2 was essential for establishing effective TH1 cell immunity for protection against lethal malaria (Fig. 2). This study also examined healthy human volunteers before and after infection with experimental P. falciparum malaria. The authors found that the expression of PDL2, but not PDL1, on blood DCs decreased significantly within 7 days of infection to levels that inversely correlated with the level of parasitaemia in each individual9. In other words, higher PDL2 levels correlated with lower parasitaemia, indicating that this was not just a feature of mouse malaria. Overall, this study highlighted the importance of PDL2 expression for malarial immunity.
Immune checkpoint blockade in malaria. A recent study showed that a multimeric form of PDL2 fused with the Fc region of immunoglobulin (PDL2–Fc) given to mice infected with lethal malaria was sufficient to attenuate the lethal infection and mediate survival following reinfections after several months, without additional PDL2–Fc9 (Fig. 2). Furthermore, combined blockade of the inhibitory molecules PDL1 and lymphocyte activation gene 3 protein (LAG3; also known as CD223) with antibodies accelerated the clearance of acute non-lethal blood-stage malaria (Plasmodium yoelii) by improving CD4+ T cell function and increasing antibody titres26. Finally, antibody-mediated triggering of OX40 signalling also improved CD4+ T helper cell and humoral immunity and thus parasite clearance during non-lethal malarial infections30.
During Plasmodium berghei infections in mice resistant to cerebral malaria, antibody-mediated blockade of either CTLA4 or PDL1, but not PDL2, resulted in higher levels of T cell activation with improved IFNγ production but increased the incidence of cerebral malaria in these mice31. This was most likely because CTLA4 or PDL1 blockade did not improve CD4+ T cell functions sufficiently to control systemic parasite growth and sequestration in the brain before improved CD8+ T cell functions could cause bystander pathology in the brain. By contrast, administering soluble multimeric PDL2–Fc fusion protein reduced the incidence of cerebral malaria by 78%9. Similarly, blocking TIM3 signalling with an antibody restored lymphocyte activity in Plasmodium infections, resulting in accelerated parasite clearance and reduced symptoms of cerebral disease in P. berghei-infected mice29. The suppressive function of Treg cells in lethal P. yoelii-infected mice was inhibited by GITR blockade, indicating another potential target32. B and T lymphocyte attenuator (BTLA; also known as CD272) has also been associated with cerebral malaria, and blockade of this inhibitory molecule significantly reduced the incidence of cerebral malaria compared with control mice33.
Overall, several checkpoint proteins contribute to the pathogenesis of malaria, and further investigation of their potential as therapeutic targets is warranted. These therapies may also have the potential to be used to 're-invigorate' immune cells, which are suggested to be non-responsive in areas where malaria is endemic26,27, to allow vaccines to generate long-term immunity. Alternatively, checkpoint blockade could complement malarial drugs to generate long-term immunity, as seen for PDL2–Fc9.
Immune checkpoint proteins in HIV
There are 37 million people living with HIV, and each year there are 2 million new infections and 1 million deaths34. Antiretroviral therapy (ART) has dramatically reduced HIV-related morbidity and mortality, but only 40% of people living with HIV globally are receiving ART34, and there is no vaccine or cure. Lifelong ART is required, as once treatment is stopped, the virus rapidly rebounds. Given the social and economic impact of the lifelong medical care required for people living with HIV, finding a cure has become a major global priority35. Immune checkpoint proteins have been extensively studied during HIV infection, initially in relation to natural history and T cell function, but more recently in relation to complications of HIV infection. In addition, using immune checkpoint blockade could potentially be exploited as a strategy to achieve a cure.
T cell exhaustion and immune checkpoint proteins in HIV infection. T cell exhaustion is a hallmark of many chronic viral infections, including HIV. In untreated HIV infection, there is upregulated expression of multiple immune checkpoint proteins, including PD1, CTLA4, TIM3 and LAG3, on both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells36,37,38. Following ART, expression of immune checkpoint proteins declines but remains elevated compared with controls not infected with HIV38. Whether ART is started early (within 6 months of infection) or late (within 2 years of infection), similar expression levels of immune checkpoint proteins persist39. In HIV infection, expression of immune checkpoint proteins varies on different T cell subsets. Increased expression of PD1 is predominantly seen on central memory T cells40, whereas both PD1 and CTLA4 are expressed by Treg cells and LAG3 is expressed by effector memory T cells41 (Fig. 3). In addition, PD1 is often co-expressed with proteins that help to promote T cell activation, such as CD38 and MHC class II molecules42.
Increased levels of PD1 expression on total and HIV-specific CD8+ T cells in untreated HIV infection were first reported more than 10 years ago36,43,44. PD1 is also highly expressed by cytotoxic CD8+ T cells that migrate into lymphoid follicles; these follicular cytotoxic CD8+ T cells express high levels of CXC-chemokine receptor 5 (CXCR5) and PD1 but low levels of other immune checkpoint proteins, such as TIM3 (Ref. 45). There is an inverse association between the frequency of cytotoxic CD8+ T cells and HIV-infected cells in lymphoid follicles, and a similar inverse relationship has been recently observed in untreated simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infection45,46,47. Finally, ex vivo blockade with anti-PD1 or anti-PDL1 antibodies resulted in improved HIV-specific CD8+ T cell function and killing of infected target cells36,43,44 (Table 2), as described for cancer antigens.
Multiple observational studies have demonstrated a clear association between expression of PD1 on either CD4+ or CD8+ T cells and clinical outcome. In the absence of ART, increased expression of PD1 was associated with an accelerated decline in the number of CD4+ T cells following acute infection48 and untreated chronic infection36. Following ART, PD1 expression on CD8+ T cells has been associated with impaired CD4+ T cell immune reconstitution49, microvascular disease50, elevated levels of oxidized high-density and low-density lipoproteins51 and a shorter time to viral rebound once ART was stopped52.
HIV can establish either productive or latent infection. In latent infection, virus replication is incomplete, with the virus integrating in the host genome but not proceeding efficiently to transcription, translation or production of virus particles (reviewed in Ref. 35). Following productive infection with HIV or other retroviruses such as feline immunodeficiency virus, PDL1 expression is upregulated on infected CD4+ T cells, and that exacerbates CD8+ T cell exhaustion and immune escape53. It remains unclear if PDL1 or PDL2 expression is increased on CD4+ T cells after ART or on latently infected cells.
In vivo immune checkpoint blockade for SIV and HIV infection. The administration of anti-PD1 antibody to SIV-infected rhesus macaques resulted in rapid expansion of virus-specific CD8+ T cells with improved functional quality, as demonstrated by delayed time to death of the macaques and lower SIV RNA levels in plasma54 (Table 2). Other beneficial effects of anti-PD1 antibody treatment in the setting of SIV infection have included reduced interferon signalling and improved gut permeability55. In preliminary work assessing the administration of anti-PD1 (Ref. 56) or anti-PDL1 (avelumab)57 antibodies to SIV-infected macaques on ART, there were no adverse effects, but in contrast to the results of studies in rhesus macaques not receiving ART, there was limited expansion of SIV-specific CD8+ T cells56. It is possible that an effective T cell response to anti-PD1 antibody requires the presence of antigen and that because ART leads to a dramatic reduction in viral antigens, the functional response to immune checkpoint blockade may be limited in this setting. Further work is needed to better understand the effects of immune checkpoint blockade on T cell function following ART.
In individuals infected with HIV and not receiving ART, the upregulation of CTLA4 expression on HIV-specific CD4+ T cells was also demonstrated more than a decade ago, and similarly to the upregulation of PD1 expression, this was associated with increased HIV disease progression37. When SIV-infected macaques, both on and off ART, were treated with ipilimumab (anti-CTLA4 antibody), those that were not receiving ART showed a significant increase in rates of HIV replication, presumably as a result of an increased number of activated CD4+ T cells, which would be targets for SIV infection58. In another study of SIV-infected macaques on partially suppressive ART, ipilimumab led to a modest increase in both HIV-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells and a significant reduction in cell-associated HIV RNA in lymph nodes59. These data therefore suggest that anti-CTLA4 antibody has a substantial effect on HIV that persists on ART, through a different mechanism of action to anti-PD1 antibody, leading to a reduction in HIV RNA in lymph node tissue. However, the mechanism by which this is achieved or whether there is antibody activity in individuals infected with HIV and on fully suppressive ART remains unknown.
In individuals infected with HIV, LAG3 is also highly expressed on CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in lymph nodes and blood, and this expression is directly related to levels of HIV RNA in plasma but inversely related to CD4+ T cell counts41. Expression of T cell immunoreceptor with immunoglobulin and ITIM domains (TIGIT) is also increased on CD8+ T cells in untreated and treated HIV infection compared with controls without HIV38 even following early initiation of ART60. HIV-specific CD8+ T cells were almost exclusively TIGIT+ and co-expressed PD1, CD160 and 2B4 (also known as CD244)60. HIV-specific TIGIThi cells were also negatively correlated with polyfunctionality and had reduced expression of the co-stimulatory receptor CD226. Blockade of TIGIT and PD1 with anti-TIGIT and anti-PDL1 antibodies ex vivo led to a significant improvement of the HIV-specific function of CD4+ T cells from individuals infected with HIV and on ART38. Antibodies against LAG3, TIM3 and TIGIT are all in early clinical development and, given their more favourable safety profiles, may be more suitable agents to assess in individuals infected with HIV61.
Immune checkpoint proteins and HIV persistence. In contrast to malignant cells, which traditionally express the ligands for immune checkpoint proteins such as PDL1 (Ref. 62), in individuals infected with HIV and on ART, immune checkpoint proteins themselves identify cells preferentially infected with HIV that persist on ART63,64 (Fig. 4). This observation is of great importance in efforts to eliminate residual virus that persists despite ART, as these infected cells are a major barrier to a cure. Although HIV can persist in multiple forms in individuals infected with HIV who are on ART, latently infected cells are the most important. Latency can be established in long-lived and proliferating central and transitional memory T cells as well as other T cell subsets, including T follicular helper (TFH) cells and stem cell memory T cells (reviewed in Ref. 35).
Many studies have shown a significant correlation between the frequency of PD1+CD4+ T cells and PD1+CD8+ T cells with different markers of HIV persistence on ART in the blood63,65,66, lymph nodes67 and gastrointestinal tract, which has almost three times the frequency of PD1+CD4+ T cells compared with the lymph nodes or blood68. However, the most direct evidence of a clear relationship between HIV persistence and PD1 expression comes from sorting CD4+ T cells from blood, where a 10-fold enrichment of HIV in PD1hiCD4+ T cells compared with PD1lowCD4+ T cells was observed63. Similar findings were also reported from lymph node tissue collected from individuals infected with HIV and on ART, where HIV was highly enriched in cells expressing PD1 and CXCR5, which together identify TFH cells67 (Fig. 3). HIV enrichment in PD1hi cells may be due to the inhibitory effects of PD1 on T cell activation, which would limit HIV transcription, RNA export and RNA translation and therefore favour latent infection over productive infection (Fig. 4).
Immune checkpoint proteins other than PD1 may also identify infected cells in individuals on ART. We recently demonstrated that HIV was significantly enriched in sorted cells obtained from individuals infected with HIV on ART that expressed PD1, TIGIT and LAG3 compared with cells that expressed none of these immune checkpoint proteins64 (Fig. 3). The relationship between CTLA4 and virus persistence on ART has been less well studied. In untreated individuals, HIV replicates preferentially in activated CD4+ T cells, which express high levels of CTLA4, and therefore virus is enriched in CTLA4+CD4+ T cells69. Rapid internalization of CTLA4, mediated by the viral protein Nef, may potentially play a role in favouring HIV persistence in these cells70. Whether latently infected CTLA4+CD4+ T cells in the blood or tissues persist on ART is currently unclear.
These exciting observations are now being exploited by using immune checkpoint blockers to potentially reverse latency, allowing for expression of HIV proteins on the surface of the cell, which would lead to immune clearance of the virus or virus-induced cytolysis (Fig. 4). Latency reversal would be attempted in individuals on ART, so that any new virus produced could not go on to infect other cells. Through the use of CD4+ T cells from individuals with HIV infection on ART, the ex vivo administration of anti-PD1 antibody together with the latency-reversing agent bryostatin led to a significant increase in HIV RNA released into the supernatant (N. Chomont, personal communication). In addition, in an individual infected with HIV on ART with metastatic melanoma, we observed a significant increase in cell-associated HIV RNA following treatment with anti-CTLA4 (ipilimumab)71 and anti-PD1 (nivolumab) antibodies72. These results need to be confirmed in other HIV-infected individuals on ART who are now receiving checkpoint blockade for the management of cancer. The effects of other immune checkpoint blockers on latency establishment or reversal are unknown and warrant further exploration using antibodies, either alone or in combination.
Clinical trials of immune checkpoint blockade as a strategy for curing HIV. A phase II dose-escalation study of anti-PDL1 antibody therapy (by Bristol-Myers Squibb) was recently ceased after administration of the lowest dose to six individuals with HIV infection on ART73. The study was stopped due to retinal toxicity observed in a simultaneous macaque study. Interestingly, although there were no changes in levels of HIV RNA or DNA, there was a clear increase in Gag-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in two of the six participants. One of the six participants developed hypophysitis many months after receiving anti-PDL1 antibody therapy. This study remains the only trial of an immune checkpoint blocker in individuals with HIV infection without malignancy, and further trials are unlikely to proceed until more safety data for these compounds are available.
To date, few individuals with HIV infection have received even the currently licensed immune checkpoint blockers, as individuals with HIV infection were excluded from the initial clinical trials of these agents. However, now that these drugs are licensed, many individuals with HIV infection are receiving these antibodies as part of clinical care. Several clinical trials in the US and France are currently evaluating the effects of anti-PD1 and anti-CTLA4 antibodies either alone or in combination on HIV-associated malignancies, as well as on markers of HIV persistence and HIV-specific immunity (reviewed in Ref. 74).
In summary, immune checkpoint blockers could have multiple beneficial contributions towards achieving a cure or allowing individuals to safely stop ART (Fig. 4). First, the administration of these drugs could potentially increase HIV-specific T cell function to eliminate HIV-infected cells. Second, they may lead to direct elimination of infected cells that express the relevant immune checkpoint marker, particularly when using a depleting antibody that activates Fc receptors, as described for ipilimumab75 and modified antibodies against PD1 (Ref. 76). Third, immune checkpoint blockers could potentially reverse HIV latency. Finally, immune checkpoint blockers can increase vaccine responsiveness77 and therefore could potentially be combined with other therapeutic vaccines in development.
Immune checkpoint proteins in HBV infection
HBV is a DNA virus that predominantly replicates in the hepatocytes of the liver. Following entry of HBV into a hepatocyte, there is production of intracellular covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA), which produces multiple forms of HBV RNA and HBV proteins, including hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg), as well as HBV DNA, which is required to form new infectious virions. Globally, there are 250 million people living with chronic HBV78, and the main complications include end-stage cirrhosis and/or hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)79. HBV can be effectively treated with self-limited interferon therapy or, more commonly, with long-term antiviral treatment using nucleotide–nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs). Similarly to ART in individuals with HIV infection, treatment with NRTIs is lifelong, and there is no cure for HBV80. However, in contrast to HIV, approximately 10–15% of individuals can safely stop NRTI treatment for HBV without viral rebound. Inducing antiviral-free remission for HBV is possible with the development of antibodies to HBsAg, commonly referred to as seroconversion80.
T cell exhaustion and immune checkpoint proteins in HBV infection. HBV-specific T cells are important in HBV pathogenesis, where they play a role in the initial clearance of acute infection, abnormal liver function commonly observed in acute and chronic infection, development of cirrhosis and successful HBsAg seroconversion following antiviral treatment (reviewed in Ref. 81). The role and phenotype of HBV-specific T cells are different at each of these clinical stages, as circulating and intrahepatic HBV-specific T cells are infrequent in individuals chronically infected with HBV compared with individuals who have cleared acute HBV infection82,83.
In untreated chronic HBV infection, total and HBV-specific CD8+ T cells express high levels of PD1, CTLA4 and TIM3 (Refs 84,85,86), and in acute HBV infection, circulating and intrahepatic CD8+ T cells express high levels of PD1 (Ref. 87; Fig. 3). The upregulation of PD1 expression in acute HBV infection is thought to limit intrahepatic inflammation87. The ligand for PD1, PDL1, has also been shown to be elevated on circulating CD14+ monocytes and CD19+ B cells in individuals with chronic HBV infection, liver cirrhosis and HCC and therefore may contribute to ongoing T cell exhaustion88. These exhausted antigen-specific CD8+ T cells are prone to apoptosis through co-expression of the pro-apoptotic protein BIM (also known as BCL-2L11)86. By contrast, HBV-specific CD4+ T cells, defined by MHC class II tetramers and HBV core peptides, expressed increased levels of PD1, but no increase in CTLA4, TIM3, KLRG1 or 2B4 expression was observed89 (summarized in Fig. 3).
A recent genome-wide expression-profiling study of HBV-specific CD8+ T cells from individuals with acute and chronic HBV infection revealed extensive downregulation of multiple pathways, including pathways associated with mitochondrial function, and T cells from these individuals showed functional recovery in the presence of mitochondrial-targeted antioxidants90. These studies demonstrated that defects in T cell function in chronic HBV infection are not limited to increased expression of immune checkpoint proteins, although mitochondrial dysfunction was clearly enriched in PD1hiCD8+ T cells in this study90.
The phenotype of intrahepatic CD4+ and CD8+ T cells has also been extensively characterized in HBV infection. Initial descriptions of intrahepatic T cells in chronic HBV infection showed a high infiltration of total and HBV-specific CD8+ T cells91. Intrahepatic T cells also show upregulation of PD1 (Ref. 87) and TIM3 (Ref. 84) expression. The ligand of TIM3, galectin 9, was also upregulated on Kupffer cells, perhaps allowing for persisting intrahepatic T cell exhaustion84. These intrahepatic CD8+ T cells also express other proteins of exhaustion, including BTLA, and can produce IL-10, which further inhibits effective T cell function92.
Immune checkpoint blockade as a strategy for curing HBV. Multiple ex vivo studies using blood collected from individuals with chronic HBV infection have demonstrated that inhibition of PD1, CTLA4, 2B4 and TIM3 leads to increased HBV-specific CD8+ T cell function83,84,86,93,94,95,96. By contrast, only blockade of PD1 and not blockade of the other inhibitory proteins partially improved HBV-specific CD4+ T cell functions, with increased production of IFNγ, IL-2 and tumour necrosis factor (TNF)89. Checkpoint blockade, used either alone or in combination, may potentially increase the production of HBV-specific CD8+ T cells and even the production of antibodies against HBsAg, but there are substantial theoretical risks, including increased infiltration of reinvigorated T cells into the liver, which could trigger inflammation, but this has not been demonstrated in preclinical studies or recent clinical trials.
The effects of PD1 blockade in vivo during HBV infection have been evaluated in mouse and woodchuck models. Blockade of the PD1–PDL1 or PD1–PDL2 pathways with anti-PDL1 and anti-PDL2 antibodies in woodchuck hepatitis virus (WHV)-infected animals partially restored T cell function without hepatotoxicity97. In a separate study of WHV, the combination of antivirals (entecavir), therapeutic vaccination and anti-PDL1 antibody blockade, followed by cessation of entecavir, did not result in rebound of WHV in plasma and instead led to the development of antibodies against WHV surface antigens, with complete viral clearance in some animals98. Interestingly, the addition of anti-PDL1 antibody to the vaccine and entecavir arm compared with the vaccine and entecavir alone arm led to a significantly increased immunological and clinical response and was not associated with hepatotoxicity98. These studies look very promising for similar interventions to achieve sustained remission off NRTIs in human clinical trials.
A recent open-label study of nivolumab (anti-PD1 antibody; 0.3 mg per kg) with and without an HBV vaccine involving 20 participants with virally suppressed chronic HBV infection showed that nivolumab was safe and well tolerated, and one participant underwent HBsAg seroconversion99. Many other clinical trials of immune checkpoint blockade in individuals with chronic HBV, usually in the setting of HCC, are currently underway. One major study is a phase 1/2, open-label, non-comparative, dose escalation and expansion trial (CheckMate 040) of nivolumab in adults (≥18 years) with histologically confirmed advanced HCC with or without HCV or HBV infection100. Symptomatic treatment-related adverse events were similar in patients with and without HCV or HBV infection100, which is encouraging and the trial recently led to the licensing of nivolumab for HCC. Future cohorts within CheckMate040 which includes individuals with HBV on antiviral therapy will also examine nivolumab with other agents, including anti-CTLA-4 (NCT01658878). Another 60-month observational study, led by the Taiwan Food and Drug Administration, is also in progress (NCT02402699). This is a study of individuals in Taiwan with known HBV or HCV infection, regardless of control on antiviral therapy, and who are being treated with ipilimumab for advanced (unresectable, recurrent or metastatic) melanoma. Many other studies of immune checkpoint blockade for HCC that do not specifically exclude individuals with chronic HBV are currently enrolling participants.
In summary, immune checkpoint proteins play an important role in the natural history of HBV infection, limiting liver damage in acute infection and potentially facilitating persistent infection in chronic HBV infection. Initial studies indicate that nivolumab is safe in chronic HBV infection, but further studies are needed to determine whether anti-PD1 antibody and/or other immune checkpoint blockers can be used to induce HBV remission.
Immune checkpoint proteins in tuberculosis
Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causal agent of TB, is one of the ten most fatal diseases worldwide, with 10.4 million symptomatic infections and 1.8 million deaths (including 0.4 million among people co-infected with HIV) recorded in 2015. M. tuberculosis characteristically infects the lungs but can also affect any other organ of the body. TB is treatable and curable if the active, drug-susceptible infection is treated with a standard 6-month course of four antimicrobial drugs. However, the prevalence of multidrug-resistant TB is now increasing and requires longer treatment and more complicated antibiotic regimens.
CD4+ T cells are required for host resistance to M. tuberculosis. TB-specific CD4+ T cells in individuals with active TB infection were found to produce IFNγ, IL-2 and TNF and express PD1 (Ref. 101). However, PD1 expression levels on total CD4+ T cells from individuals with active infection were only slightly higher those on than cells from healthy donors102. Notably, HIV and TB co-infection was consistently and independently associated with a reduced frequency of mycobacterial-specific CD4+ T cells secreting both IFNγ and IL-2, and the proportion correlated inversely with HIV RNA levels in plasma101.
Mouse models used to determine the contribution of PD1 to TB pathogenesis have yielded conflicting results. Surprisingly, mice with a deletion of Pdcd1, which encodes PD1, showed increased pathology, and PD1-deficient CD4+ T cells are sufficient to trigger early mortality103,104. The lungs of the PD1-deficient mice showed uncontrolled bacterial proliferation and focal necrotic areas with predominantly neutrophilic infiltrates, but a lower number of infiltrating T and B cells105. Pro-inflammatory cytokines such as TNF and IL-6 were significantly increased in the lungs and sera of these mice, consistent with aberrant inflammation105. Notably, TB-specific T cell proliferation was dramatically reduced in PD1-deficient mice compared with controls due to an increased number of Treg cells and recruitment of mesenchymal stem cells104. Similarly, functionally exhausted TIM3+ T cells were shown to accumulate during chronic TB infection, and TIM3 blockade restored T cell functions and improved control of the bacterial load in chronically infected susceptible mice106.
The treatment of multidrug-resistant TB (that is, in which the bacteria shows resistance in vitro to at least isoniazid and rifampicin) is complicated. To obtain a clinical and a microbiological cure, individuals are treated for long periods because of the lower effectiveness of the second-line and third-line drugs107. Long-term exposure to these drugs, characterized by a poor safety and tolerability profile, reduces the adherence by individuals. The combination of these drugs with checkpoint inhibition may allow immunity to develop when the bacterial burden is under even partial control. For these reasons, checkpoint blockade during chronic TB infection requires further consideration.
Conclusion
Studies of the interplay between immune activation and suppression have shown an important role for immune checkpoint proteins in the pathogenesis of infectious diseases and malignancies. Notably, immune checkpoint blockade has revolutionized the treatment of cancer with remarkable success. A number of studies have suggested that immune checkpoint blockade may also be highly relevant for treating several infectious diseases, including malaria, HIV infection, HBV infection and TB (Table 2); in these diseases where drug resistance remains a challenge, effective vaccine development has not been possible, or lifelong drug treatment is necessary. It should be recognized, however, that immune checkpoint blockade may also cause immune-related adverse events, as CTLA4, PD1, LAG3 and TIM3 are also involved in the regulation of peripheral tolerance to prevent autoimmunity (Box 4). Furthermore, whether there will be variable responses to immune checkpoint blockade and clinical outcomes for infectious diseases also remains to be determined. Despite this, immune checkpoint blockade may be an important new strategy for tackling chronic infections for which we are still lacking effective therapies or vaccines.
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Acknowledgements
The authors sincerely thank M. Flynn for the design and implementation of the figures. The authors acknowledge editorial assistance of S. Johnatty from SugarApple Communications in finalizing the manuscript. The authors thank N. Chomont, University of Montreal, for helpful comments and discussion. The authors acknowledge the support of The National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) (Australia). S.R.L. is an NHMRC practitioner fellow and is supported by the National Institutes for Health Delaney AIDS Research Enterprise (DARE U19 AI126611 and AI096109) and the American Foundation for AIDS Research.
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S.R.L. has received grant support for investigator-initiated clinical trials from Merck, Gilead and Viiv Healthcare. M.W. declares no competing interests.
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Wykes, M., Lewin, S. Immune checkpoint blockade in infectious diseases. Nat Rev Immunol 18, 91–104 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/nri.2017.112
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nri.2017.112
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