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Single-cell RNA sequencing reveals expanded clones of islet antigen-reactive CD4+ T cells in peripheral blood of subjects with type 1 diabetes

  • Karen Cerosaletti
  • , Fariba Barahmand-Pour-Whitman
  • , Junbao Yang
  • , Hannah A. DeBerg
  • , Matthew J. Dufort
  • , Sara A. Murray
  • , Elisabeth Israelsson
  • , Cate Speake
  • , Vivian H. Gersuk
  • , James A. Eddy
  • , Helena Reijonen
  • , Carla J. Greenbaum
  • , William W. Kwok
  • , Erik Wambre
  • , Martin Prlic
  • , Raphael Gottardo
  • , Gerald T. Nepom
  • , Peter S. Linsley

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

68 Scopus citations

Abstract

The significance of islet Ag-reactive T cells found in peripheral blood of type 1 diabetes (T1D) subjects is unclear, partly because similar cells are also found in healthy control (HC) subjects.We hypothesized that key disease-associated cells would show evidence of prior Ag exposure, inferred from expanded TCR clonotypes, and essential phenotypic properties in their transcriptomes. To test this, we developed single-cell RNA sequencing procedures for identifying TCR clonotypes and transcript phenotypes in individual T cells. We applied these procedures to analysis of islet Ag-reactive CD4+ memory T cells from the blood of T1D and HC individuals after activation with pooled immunodominant islet peptides. We found extensive TCR clonotype sharing in Ag-activated cells, especially from individual T1D subjects, consistent with in vivo T cell expansion during disease progression. The expanded clonotype from one T1D subject was detected at repeat visits spanning >15 mo, demonstrating clonotype stability. Notably, we found no clonotype sharing between subjects, indicating a predominance of "private" TCR specificities. Expanded clones from two T1D subjects recognized distinct IGRP peptides, implicating this molecule as a trigger for CD4+ T cell expansion. Although overall transcript profiles of cells from HC and T1D subjects were similar, profiles from the most expanded clones were distinctive. Our findings demonstrate that islet Ag-reactive CD4+ memory T cells with unique Ag specificities and phenotypes are expanded during disease progression and can be detected by single-cell analysis of peripheral blood.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)323-335
Number of pages13
JournalJournal of Immunology
Volume199
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jul 2017
Externally publishedYes

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