| Literature DB >> 34707610 |
Rosaely Casalegno Garduño1, Jan Däbritz1,2.
Abstract
CD8+ T cells are involved in the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), a complex multifactorial chronic disease. Here, we present an overview of the current research with the controversial findings of CD8+ T cell subsets and discuss some possible perspectives on their therapeutic value in IBD. Studies on the role of CD8+ T cells in IBD have contradictory outcomes, which might be related to the heterogeneity of the cells. Recent data suggest that cytotoxic CD8+ T cells (Tc1) and interleukin (IL) 17-producing CD8+ (Tc17) cells contribute to the pathogenesis of IBD. Moreover, subsets of regulatory CD8+ T cells are abundant at sites of inflammation and can exhibit pro-inflammatory features. Some subsets of tissue resident memory CD8+ T cells (Trm) might be immunosuppressant, whereas others might be pro-inflammatory. Lastly, exhausted T cells might indicate a positive outcome for patients. The function and plasticity of different subsets of CD8+ T cells in health and IBD remain to be further investigated in a challenging field due to the limited availability of mucosal samples and adequate controls.Entities:
Keywords: CD8+ Tc1; Crohn´s disease; IBD; T regs; TRM; Tc17; ulcerative colitis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34707610 PMCID: PMC8542854 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.738762
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Heterogeneity in the CD8+ T cell pool. Upon antigen presentation and cytokine release by dendritic cells (DCs), naïve CD8+ T cells differentiate into different subsets including cytotoxic/cytolytic (Tc1 or CTLs), Tc2, Tc9, Tc17, Tc22, and immunosuppressant T regulatory (T reg). CD8+ T cells produce different cytokines according to their phenotype. A few clones remain and constitute the memory compartment (i.e. central memory, effector memory, tissue-resident memory). Modified from Golubovskaya and Wu (15), Mittrücker et al. (22) and St. Paul and Ohashi (23). CTL, cytotoxic T lymphocyte; DC, dendritic cell; Tcm, central memory T cell; Tem, effector memory T cell; Trm, tissue-resident memory T cell.
Figure 2Potential mechanisms of the adaptive immune response towards gut microbiota in homeostasis and chronic inflammation. Under homeostasis, microbiota is restricted to the lumen of the gut by both an epithelial cell layer and a mucus layer, produced by goblet cells and full of antibacterial peptides. Dendritic cells (DCs), M cells and macrophages acquired antigens from the lumen. Antigen presenting cells (APCs) carrying those antigens migrate to Peyer´s patches (PP) where they present the antigens to naïve T cells to prime them. Regulatory CD8+ T cells are able to immunosuppress Tc1 by interleukin (e.g. IL10) release and cell-cell contact, leading Tc1 cells towards anergy, a non-responsive stage, or even re-directed towards a T reg phenotype. Some double positive Foxp3+ IL17+ cells might be in an intermediate stage towards Tc17, relevant cells for mucosal maintenance. Trm cells contribute to the homeostasis of the tissue by releasing IL10. DC, dendritic cell; IL, interleukin; PP, Peyer´s patch; Tc1 or CTL, cytotoxic T lymphocyte; Tc17, IL17-producing CD8+ T cells; T reg, CD8+ T regulatory cell.
The contribution of CD8+ T cells in IBD.
| Ref. | Key findings | Disease/disease status | CD8+ T cell origin | Experimental Settings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gasparetto et al., 2021 ( | Transcriptional signature and DNA methylation profiles of circulating CD8+ T cells from pediatric patients with active IBD does not correlate to clinical outcome | Pediatric active CD and UC | PBMCs | Genome transcript analysis of magnetic-sorted CD8+ |
| Jaeger et al., 2021 ( | Intraepithelial and lamina propria compartments harbor similar CD8+ T cell subsets. Circulating and tissue resident CD8+ T subsets were found in the intraepithelial compartment. CD8+ T cells were increased in non-inflamed LP of CD, whereas CD8+ T cells were decreased in the intraepithelium at sites of inflammation. KLRG1+ CD8+ T frequencies showed no difference between patients and CD patients. | Severe CD | Inflamed and non-inflamed terminal ileum biopsies | CyTOF and scRNA-seq on CD45+ IEL and LP cells. Cluster analysis on CD8+ cells |
| Boland et al., 2020 ( | Single cell atlas of colonic CD8+ T cells from UC patients revealed highly heterogeneic populations. CD8+ Trm might be involved in the development of UC. | Active UC | PBMCs and rectal biopsies | scRNA-seq on CD45+ cells. Cluster analysis on CD8+ cells |
| Bottois et al., 2020 ( | High numbers of CD103+ CD8+ Trm were found in the mucosa of CD patients and controls, but those from patients had a more prominent Th17 profile. KLRG1+ CD8+ Trm cells were increased in inflammatory conditions. In Crohn´s disease patients the CD103+ CD8+ T cells might alert the effector KLRG1+ CD8+ T subset. | Active CD | PBMC as well as inflamed and non-inflamed ileum biopsies | CD5+ magnetic and Aria sorted |
| Bruckner et al., 2020 ( | Pro-inflammatory TNFα+ CD8+ T cells play a role on the development of fistulas in CD patients. | CD with fistula | Biopsies from acute inflamed fistulas | FACS on CD8+ cells |
| Corridoni et al., 2020 ( | Single cell atlas of colonic CD8+ T cells from biopsies of UC patients. Informative platform for future functional studies. | Active UC | Inflamed colonic biopsies | scRNA-seq on CD3+ CD8+ cells |
| Libera et al., 2020 ( | Mucosal-derived CD39+ CD8+ T cell frequency was decreased in IBD patients compared to healthy controls | Active CD and UC | PBMCs and colonic biopsies | FC analysis on CD39+ CD8+ cells |
| Noble et al., 2020 ( | Circulating CD8+ memory T cells from HDs respond to intestinal bacteria derived antigens. Reduced numbers of mucosal CD8+ Trm were observed in IBD patients compared to controls. | CD and UC | Non-inflamed colonic biopsies and PBMC | FC analysis on CD103+ Runx3+ CD8+ |
| Huang et al., 2019 ( | Colonic | Pediatric active CD and UC | Colonic biopsies | scRNA-seq on CD45+ cells. Cluster analysis on CD8+ cells |
| Rabe et al., 2019 ( | Pediatric ulcerative colitis patients had higher levels of activated HLA.DR+ β1-integrin+ CD8+ T cells in the periphery and that correlated positively to systemic and mucosal inflammation biomarkers. Pediatric Crohn´s disease patients showed equal levels of activated HLA.DR+ β1-integrin+ CD8+ T cells to controls, but an increase on the CD23+ B cell population. | Newly diagnosed pediatric CD and UC | Blood | FC analysis on CD8+ |
| Roosenboom et al., 2019 ( | Decreased percentage of CD103+ CD8+ T cells in the inflamed ileum and colon of IBD patients compared to controls. CD103+ CD8+ T cell frequencies were comparable between IBD patients in remission and controls. | Active CD and UC (including follow-up) | Biopsies from inflamed colon and ileum | FC analysis on CD103+ CD8+ |
| Smillie et al., 2019 ( | Single cell atlas of colonic biopsies of UC patients revealed Tc17 subset as expanded, and major source of IL17, in inflamed tissue. | Active UC | Inflamed colonic biopsies | scRNA-seq on all cells. Cluster analysis on CD8+ cells |
| Zundler et al., 2019 ( | Lamina propria CD103+ CD69+ CD8+ Trm cells were increased in inflamed mucosa of IBD patients compared to controls. | Active CD and UC | Colonic biopsies | FC analysis on CD103+ CD69+ CD8+ |
| Smids et al., 2018 ( | CD103+ CD8+ Trm cells were decreased in inflamed tissue of IBD compared to non-inflamed biopsies and controls. Furthermore, CD8+ Tcm were increased in inflamed intestine biopsies of UC patients with active disease, whereas CD8+ Tem frequency was decreased compared to controls. | Active CD and UC | Biopsies of inflamed intestine and of follow-up endoscopies | FC analysis on CD8+ |
| Boschetti et al., 2016 ( | Circulating and mucosal GrB+ perforin+ CTLs were abundant in CD patients with recurrent disease, compared to endoscopic remission and controls. | Recurrent CD | PBMC and curative ileum biopsies | FC analysis on CD8+ |
| Tom et al., 2016 ( | The frequency of lamina propria CD8+ T regs was higher in IBD patients compared to controls. Lamina propria Tc17 prevalence was higher in UC patients compared to CD patients and controls. Circulating CD8+ T regs and Tc17 were increased in IBD patients compared to controls. | Active CD and UC | PBMC and inflamed mucosa biosies (LPMC) | FC analysis on CD8+ |
| Funderburg et al., 2013 ( | Activated IFNγ+ CD8+ cells were increased in the peripheral blood of IBD patients, and correlate to higher levels of inflammation markers in serum. | Active CD and UC | PBMCs | FC analysis on CD8+ |
| Lee et al., 2011 ( | Two distinctive CD8+ T cell expression signatures can be recognized in adult patients with active IBD, one that correlates to a mild outcome, and another one correlating to a severe one. CD8+ T cells might disrupt epithelial barrier playing an earlier role in the development of the disease. | Active CD and UC | PBMCs | CD8+ magnetic sorted |
| Brimnes et al., 2005 ( | Regulatory activity of CD8+ T cells from lamina propria of healthy gut was observed | CD and UC | LPMCs from colon | FACS on CD8+ |
CD8+ T cell subsets contribute to IBD in a different manner, some pools are pro-inflammatory whereas other are anti-inflammatory. The source where CD8 cells were obtained from might reflect different phenotypes, hence different functions of the cells. CD, Crohn’s disease; CyTOF, cytometry by time of flight; ENTPD1, ectonucleoside triphosphate diphosphohydrolase-1 (CD39-encoding gene); HDs, healthy donors; IEL, intraepithelial lymphocyte; ITGAE, integrin alpha E (CD103-encoding gene); FACS, fluorescence activated cell sorting; FC, flow cytometry; GrB, granzyme B; GZMK, granzyme K-encoding gene; LP, Lamina propria; LPMC, Lamina propria mononuclear cells; PBMCs, peripheral blood mononuclear cells; scRNA-seq, single cell RNA sequencing; Trm, resident memory T cells; UC, ulcerative colitis.
Figure 3Potential mechanisms of the adaptive immune response towards gut microbiota in chronic inflammation. Increased numbers of pathogenic bacteria (e.g. Clostridium difficile, Chlamydia pneumonia, Listeria monocytogenes) have been reported in IBD patients (50). During chronic inflammation, functional cytotoxic CD8+ Tc1 cells might be predominantly generated. The disruption of the epithelial barrier might occur by the cytotoxic effect of commensal-specific Tc1 recognizing peptides derived from commensal bacteria on the MHC-I of epithelial cells. Once the epithelial barrier is broken, bacteria can pass freely to the lamina propria initiating an immune response by members of the innate immune system (e.g. macrophages). Due to the plasticity of the cells and a highly pro-inflammatory milieu, CD8+ T regs might be driven towards Tc1 or IFN+ T regs, making the damage even greater. Trm express pro-inflammatory genes in the context of inflammation. Those pro-inflammatory Trm might be derived from pro-inflammatory Tc1 and Tc17, and some clones might exit the tissue via the blood stream and initiate inflammation in other tissue outside the gastrointestinal tract. DC, dendritic cell; GrB, granzyme B; IFNγ, interferon gamma; IL, interleukin; MHC-I, major histocompatibility complex class I; PP, Peyer´s patch; Tc1 or CTL, cytotoxic T lymphocyte; Tc17, IL17-producing CD8+ T cells; TGFβ, transforming growth factor beta; T reg, CD8+ T regulatory cell.