| Literature DB >> 33441422 |
Victor Tkachev1, James Kaminski2,3, E Lake Potter4, Scott N Furlan5, Alison Yu2, Daniel J Hunt2, Connor McGuckin2, Hengqi Zheng6, Lucrezia Colonna5, Ulrike Gerdemann2, Judith Carlson6, Michelle Hoffman5, Joe Olvera2, Chris English7, Audrey Baldessari7, Angela Panoskaltsis-Mortari8, Benjamin Watkins9, Muna Qayed9, Yvonne Suessmuth9, Kayla Betz2, Brandi Bratrude2, Amelia Langston9, John T Horan9, Jose Ordovas-Montanes3,10,11, Alex K Shalek3,12,13, Bruce R Blazar8, Mario Roederer4, Leslie S Kean1.
Abstract
Organ infiltration by donor T cells is critical to the development of acute graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD) in recipients after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (allo-HCT). However, deconvoluting the transcriptional programs of newly recruited donor T cells from those of tissue-resident T cells in aGVHD target organs remains a challenge. Here, we combined the serial intravascular staining technique with single-cell RNA sequencing to dissect the tightly connected processes by which donor T cells initially infiltrate tissues and then establish a pathogenic tissue residency program in a rhesus macaque allo-HCT model that develops aGVHD. Our results enabled creation of a spatiotemporal map of the transcriptional programs controlling donor CD8+ T cell infiltration into the primary aGVHD target organ, the gastrointestinal (GI) tract. We identified the large and small intestines as the only two sites demonstrating allo-specific, rather than lymphodepletion-driven, T cell infiltration. GI-infiltrating donor CD8+ T cells demonstrated a highly activated, cytotoxic phenotype while simultaneously developing a canonical tissue-resident memory T cell (TRM) transcriptional signature driven by interleukin-15 (IL-15)/IL-21 signaling. We found expression of a cluster of genes directly associated with tissue invasiveness, including those encoding adhesion molecules (ITGB2), specific chemokines (CCL3 and CCL4L1) and chemokine receptors (CD74), as well as multiple cytoskeletal proteins. This tissue invasion transcriptional signature was validated by its ability to discriminate the CD8+ T cell transcriptome of patients with GI aGVHD from those of GVHD-free patients. These results provide insights into the mechanisms controlling tissue occupancy of target organs by pathogenic donor CD8+ TRM cells during aGVHD in primate transplant recipients.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33441422 PMCID: PMC9469805 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.abc0227
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Transl Med ISSN: 1946-6234 Impact factor: 19.319