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Spatiotemporal single-cell profiling of gastrointestinal GVHD reveals invasive and resident memory T cell states

Authors :
Kayla Betz
John T. Horan
Judith M Carlson
Chris English
Mario Roederer
Audrey Baldessari
Ben Watkins
Jose Ordovas-Montanes
Potter El
Alex K. Shalek
James Kaminski
Michelle Hoffman
Tkachev
Connor McGuckin
Ulrike Gerdemann
Daniel J. Hunt
Bruce R. Blazar
Amelia Langston
Muna Qayed
Joe Olvera
Alison Yu
Angela Panoskaltsis-Mortari
Hengqi Betty Zheng
Yvonne Suessmuth
Brandi Bratrude
Lucrezia Colonna
Scott N. Furlan
Leslie S. Kean
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

One of the central challenges in the field of allo-immunity is deciphering the mechanisms driving T cells to infiltrate and subsequently occupy target organs to cause disease. The act of CD8-dominated T cell infiltration is critical to acute graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD), wherein donor T cells become activated, tissue-infiltrating and highly cytotoxic, causing wide-spread tissue damage after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (allo-HCT). However, in human and non-human primate studies, deconvolving the transcriptional programs of newly recruited relative to resident memory T cells in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract has remained a challenge. In this study, we combined the novel technique of Serial Intravascular Staining (SIVS) with single-cell RNA-Seq (scRNA-seq) to enable detailed dissection of the tightly connected processes by which T cells first infiltrate tissues and then establish a pathogenic tissue residency program after allo-HCT in non-human primates. Our results have enabled the creation of a spatiotemporal map of the transcriptional drivers of CD8 T cell infiltration into the primary aGVHD target-organ, the GI tract. We identify the large and small intestines as the only two sites demonstrating allo-specific, rather than lymphdepletion-driven T cell infiltration. The donor CD8 T cells that infiltrate the GI tract demonstrate a highly activated, cytotoxic phenotype while simultaneously rapidly developing canonical tissue-resident memory (TRM) protein expression and transcriptional signatures, driven by IL-15/IL-21 signaling. Moreover, by combining SIVS and transcriptomic analysis, we have been able to work backwards from this pathogenic TRM programing, and, for the first time, identify a cluster of genes directly associated with tissue invasiveness, prominently including specific chemokines and adhesion molecules and their receptors, as well as a central cytoskeletal transcriptional node. The clinical relevance of this new tissue invasion signature was validated by its ability to discriminate the CD8 T cell transcriptome of patients with GI aGVHD. These results provide new insights into the mechanisms controlling tissue infiltration and pathogenic CD8 TRM transcriptional programing, uncovering critical transitions in allo-immune tissue invasion and destruction.One sentence summaryFlow cytometric and transcriptomic analysis reveals coordinated tissue-infiltration and tissue-residency programs driving gastrointestinal aGVHD.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........57c9f35c427e408e902d56fc71e38320