| Literature DB >> 32747828 |
Daniele Corridoni1,2, Agne Antanaviciute1,3, Tarun Gupta1,2, David Fawkner-Corbett1,2, Anna Aulicino1,2, Marta Jagielowicz1,2, Kaushal Parikh1,2, Emmanouela Repapi4, Steve Taylor4, Dai Ishikawa5, Ryo Hatano6, Taketo Yamada7, Wei Xin8, Hubert Slawinski9, Rory Bowden9, Giorgio Napolitani1, Oliver Brain2, Chikao Morimoto6, Hashem Koohy10,11, Alison Simmons12,13.
Abstract
Colonic antigen-experienced lymphocytes such as tissue-resident memory CD8+ T cells can respond rapidly to repeated antigen exposure. However, their cellular phenotypes and the mechanisms by which they drive immune regulation and inflammation remain unclear. Here we compiled an unbiased atlas of human colonic CD8+ T cells in health and ulcerative colitis (UC) using single-cell transcriptomics with T-cell receptor repertoire analysis and mass cytometry. We reveal extensive heterogeneity in CD8+ T-cell composition, including expanded effector and post-effector terminally differentiated CD8+ T cells. While UC-associated CD8+ effector T cells can trigger tissue destruction and produce tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α, post-effector cells acquire innate signatures to adopt regulatory functions that may mitigate excessive inflammation. Thus, we identify colonic CD8+ T-cell phenotypes in health and UC, define their clonal relationships and characterize terminally differentiated dysfunctional UC CD8+ T cells expressing IL-26, which attenuate acute colitis in a humanized IL-26 transgenic mouse model.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32747828 DOI: 10.1038/s41591-020-1003-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Med ISSN: 1078-8956 Impact factor: 53.440