A STUB1-CHIC2 complex inhibits CD8 T cells to restrain tumor immunity.

Nature immunology
Authors
Abstract

In vivo CRISPR screens in CD8 T cells have previously uncovered targets for cancer immunotherapy; however, a minority of the genome has been individually annotated, suggesting that additional regulators remain to be discovered. Here we assessed 899 genes in CD8 T cells responding to murine melanoma and identified the E3 ubiquitin ligase STUB1 as a new negative regulator of anti-tumor CD8 T cell function. We demonstrated that Stub1 knockout CD8 T cells effectively control tumor growth across multiple murine models. Mechanistically, STUB1 interacts with the adapter protein CHIC2 to regulate cytokine receptor expression in mouse and human CD8 T cells. Among the regulated cytokine receptors, interleukin-27 receptor α is essential for tumor growth control mediated by Stub1/Chic2 knockout CD8 T cells. Together, these findings establish the STUB1-CHIC2 complex as a regulator of cytokine receptor expression in CD8 T cells and provide rationale for inhibiting this pathway to enhance CD8 T cell-mediated anti-tumor immunity.

Year of Publication
2025
Journal
Nature immunology
Volume
26
Issue
9
Pages
1476-1487
Date Published
09/2025
ISSN
1529-2916
DOI
10.1038/s41590-025-02231-6
PubMed ID
40796662
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