A human mutation in STAT3 promotes type 1 diabetes through a defect in CD8+ T cell tolerance.
Jeremy T WarshauerJulia A BelkAlice Y ChanJiaxi WangAlexander R GuptaQuanming ShiNikolaos SkartsisYani PengJonah D PhippsDante AcenasJennifer A SmithStanley J TamakiQizhi TangJames M GardnerAnsuman T SatpathyMark S AndersonPublished in: The Journal of experimental medicine (2021)
Naturally occurring cases of monogenic type 1 diabetes (T1D) help establish direct mechanisms driving this complex autoimmune disease. A recently identified de novo germline gain-of-function (GOF) mutation in the transcriptional regulator STAT3 was found to cause neonatal T1D. We engineered a novel knock-in mouse incorporating this highly diabetogenic human STAT3 mutation (K392R) and found that these mice recapitulated the human autoimmune diabetes phenotype. Paired single-cell TCR and RNA sequencing revealed that STAT3-GOF drives proliferation and clonal expansion of effector CD8+ cells that resist terminal exhaustion. Single-cell ATAC-seq showed that these effector T cells are epigenetically distinct and have differential chromatin architecture induced by STAT3-GOF. Analysis of islet TCR clonotypes revealed a CD8+ cell reacting against known antigen IGRP, and STAT3-GOF in an IGRP-reactive TCR transgenic model demonstrated that STAT3-GOF intrinsic to CD8+ cells is sufficient to accelerate diabetes onset. Altogether, these findings reveal a diabetogenic CD8+ T cell response that is restrained in the presence of normal STAT3 activity and drives diabetes pathogenesis.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- type diabetes
- rna seq
- cell proliferation
- endothelial cells
- glycemic control
- regulatory t cells
- cardiovascular disease
- induced apoptosis
- multiple sclerosis
- high throughput
- transcription factor
- gene expression
- mesenchymal stem cells
- cell cycle arrest
- cell therapy
- drug induced
- immune response
- pluripotent stem cells
- metabolic syndrome
- dna damage
- soft tissue
- nk cells
- type iii