T cell repertoire analysis suggests a prominent bystander response in human cardiac allograft vasculopathy.
Marlena V HabalApril M I MillerSamhita RaoSijie LinAleksandar ObradovicMohsen Khosravi-MaharlooeiSarah B SeePoulomi RoyRonzon ShihabSiu-Hong HoCharles C MarboeYoshifumi NakaKoji TakedaSusan RestainoArnold HanDonna ManciniMichael GivertzJoren C MadsenMegan SykesLinda J AddonizioMaryjane A FarrEmmanuel ZornPublished in: American journal of transplantation : official journal of the American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons (2020)
T cells are implicated in the pathogenesis of cardiac allograft vasculopathy (CAV), yet their clonality, specificity, and function are incompletely defined. Here we used T cell receptor β chain (TCRB) sequencing to study the T cell repertoire in the coronary artery, endomyocardium, and peripheral blood at the time of retransplant in four cases of CAV and compared it to the immunoglobulin heavy chain variable region (IGHV) repertoire from the same samples. High-dimensional flow cytometry coupled with single-cell PCR was also used to define the T cell phenotype. Extensive overlap was observed between intragraft and blood TCRBs in all cases, a finding supported by robust quantitative diversity metrics. In contrast, blood and graft IGHV repertoires from the same samples showed minimal overlap. Coronary infiltrates included CD4+ and CD8+ memory T cells expressing inflammatory (IFNγ, TNFα) and profibrotic (TGFβ) cytokines. These were distinguishable from the peripheral blood based on memory, activation, and tissue residency markers (CD45RO, CTLA-4, and CD69). Importantly, high-frequency rearrangements were traced back to endomyocardial biopsies (2-6 years prior). Comparison with four HLA-mismatched blood donors revealed a repertoire of shared TCRBs, including a subset of recently described cross-reactive sequences. These findings provide supportive evidence for an active local intragraft bystander T cell response in late-stage CAV.
Keyphrases
- peripheral blood
- coronary artery
- high frequency
- single cell
- flow cytometry
- nk cells
- endothelial cells
- left ventricular
- pulmonary artery
- working memory
- rna seq
- oxidative stress
- high throughput
- coronary artery disease
- magnetic resonance imaging
- computed tomography
- transforming growth factor
- high resolution
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- pluripotent stem cells