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Targeting T cell plasticity in kidney and gut inflammation by pooled single-cell CRISPR screening.

Leon U B EnkMalte HellmigKristoffer RieckenChristoph KilianPaul DatlingerSaskia L Jauch-SpeerTobias NebenZeba SultanaAmirrtavarshni SivayoganathanAlina BorchersHans-Joachim PaustYu ZhaoNariaki AsadaShuya LiuTheodora AgaliotiPenelope PelczarThorsten WiechChristoph BockTobias B HuberSamuel HuberStefan BonnNicola GaglianiBoris FehseUlf PanzerChristian F Krebs
Published in: Science immunology (2024)
Pro-inflammatory CD4 + T cells are major drivers of autoimmune diseases, yet therapies modulating T cell phenotypes to promote an anti-inflammatory state are lacking. Here, we identify T helper 17 (T H 17) cell plasticity in the kidneys of patients with antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody-associated glomerulonephritis on the basis of single-cell (sc) T cell receptor analysis and scRNA velocity. To uncover molecules driving T cell polarization and plasticity, we established an in vivo pooled scCRISPR droplet sequencing (iCROP-seq) screen and applied it to mouse models of glomerulonephritis and colitis. CRISPR-based gene targeting in T H 17 cells could be ranked according to the resulting transcriptional perturbations, and polarization biases into T helper 1 (T H 1) and regulatory T cells could be quantified. Furthermore, we show that iCROP-seq can facilitate the identification of therapeutic targets by efficient functional stratification of genes and pathways in a disease- and tissue-specific manner. These findings uncover T H 17 to T H 1 cell plasticity in the human kidney in the context of renal autoimmunity.
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