Gut CD4+ T cell phenotypes are a continuum molded by microbes, not by TH archetypes.
Evgeny KinerElijah WillieBrinda VijaykumarKaitavjeet ChowdharyHugo SchmutzJodie ChandlerAlexandra SchnellPratiksha I ThakoreGraham LeGrosSara MostafaviDiane MathisChristophe Benoistnull nullPublished in: Nature immunology (2021)
CD4+ effector lymphocytes (Teff) are traditionally classified by the cytokines they produce. To determine the states that Teff cells actually adopt in frontline tissues in vivo, we applied single-cell transcriptome and chromatin analyses to colonic Teff cells in germ-free or conventional mice or in mice after challenge with a range of phenotypically biasing microbes. Unexpected subsets were marked by the expression of the interferon (IFN) signature or myeloid-specific transcripts, but transcriptome or chromatin structure could not resolve discrete clusters fitting classic helper T cell (TH) subsets. At baseline or at different times of infection, transcripts encoding cytokines or proteins commonly used as TH markers were distributed in a polarized continuum, which was functionally validated. Clones derived from single progenitors gave rise to both IFN-γ- and interleukin (IL)-17-producing cells. Most of the transcriptional variance was tied to the infecting agent, independent of the cytokines produced, and chromatin variance primarily reflected activities of activator protein (AP)-1 and IFN-regulatory factor (IRF) transcription factor (TF) families, not the canonical subset master regulators T-bet, GATA3 or RORγ.
Keyphrases
- transcription factor
- dendritic cells
- induced apoptosis
- gene expression
- single cell
- cell cycle arrest
- genome wide
- immune response
- rna seq
- peripheral blood
- dna binding
- cell death
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- signaling pathway
- oxidative stress
- type diabetes
- poor prognosis
- genome wide identification
- small molecule
- bone marrow
- nk cells