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Clonally expanded CD38 hi cytotoxic CD8 T cells define the T cell infiltrate in checkpoint inhibitor-associated arthritis.

Runci WangAnvita SingarajuKathryne E MarksLorien ShakibGarrett S DunlapIfeoluwakiisi AdejoorinStinne Ravn GreisenLin ChenAidan K TirpackCarlos Andres AudeMiriam R FeinDerrick J ToddLindsey A MacFarlaneSusan M GoodmanEdward F DiCarloElena M MassarottiJeffrey A SparksAnna Helena JonssonMichael B BrennerMichael A PostowKarmela Kim ChanAnne R BassLaura T DonlinDeepak A Rao
Published in: Science immunology (2023)
Immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapies used to treat cancer, such as anti-PD-1 antibodies, can induce autoimmune conditions in some individuals. The T cell mechanisms mediating such iatrogenic autoimmunity and their overlap with spontaneous autoimmune diseases remain unclear. Here, we compared T cells from the joints of 20 patients with an inflammatory arthritis induced by ICI therapy (ICI-arthritis) with two archetypal autoimmune arthritides, rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and psoriatic arthritis (PsA). Single-cell transcriptomic and antigen receptor repertoire analyses highlighted clonal expansion of an activated effector CD8 T cell population in the joints and blood of patients with ICI-arthritis. These cells were identified as CD38 hi CD127 - CD8 T cells and were uniquely enriched in ICI-arthritis joints compared with RA and PsA and also displayed an elevated interferon signature. In vitro, type I interferon induced CD8 T cells to acquire the ICI-associated CD38 hi phenotype and enhanced cytotoxic function. In a cohort of patients with advanced melanoma, ICI therapy markedly expanded circulating CD38 hi CD127 - T cells, which were frequently bound by the therapeutic anti-PD-1 drug. In patients with ICI-arthritis, drug-bound CD8 T cells in circulation showed marked clonal overlap with drug-bound CD8 T cells from synovial fluid. These results suggest that ICI therapy directly targets CD8 T cells in patients who develop ICI-arthritis and induces an autoimmune pathology that is distinct from prototypical spontaneous autoimmune arthritides.
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