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Plasticity of intragraft alloreactive T cell clones in human gut correlates with transplant outcomes.

Jianing FuZicheng WangMercedes MartinezAleksandar Z ObradovicWenyu JiaoKristjana FrangajRebecca T L JonesXinzheng V GuoYa ZhangWan-I KuoHuaibin Mabel KoAlina IugaConstanza Bay MuntnichAdriana Prada ReyKortney RogersJulien ZuberWenji MaMichelle MironDonna L FarberJoshua I WeinerTomoaki KatoYufeng ShenMegan Sykes
Published in: The Journal of experimental medicine (2023)
The site of transition between tissue-resident memory (TRM) and circulating phenotypes of T cells is unknown. We integrated clonotype, alloreactivity, and gene expression profiles of graft-repopulating recipient T cells in the intestinal mucosa at the single-cell level after human intestinal transplantation. Host-versus-graft (HvG)-reactive T cells were mainly distributed to TRM, effector T (Teff)/TRM, and T follicular helper compartments. RNA velocity analysis demonstrated a trajectory from TRM to Teff/TRM clusters in association with rejection. By integrating pre- and post-transplantation (Tx) mixed lymphocyte reaction-determined alloreactive repertoires, we observed that pre-existing HvG-reactive T cells that demonstrated tolerance in the circulation were dominated by TRM profiles in quiescent allografts. Putative de novo HvG-reactive clones showed a transcriptional profile skewed to cytotoxic effectors in rejecting grafts. Inferred protein regulon network analysis revealed upstream regulators that accounted for the effector and tolerant T cell states. We demonstrate Teff/TRM interchangeability for individual T cell clones with known (allo)recognition in the human gut, providing novel insight into TRM biology.
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