Clonal lineage tracing reveals mechanisms skewing CD8+ T cell fate decisions in chronic infection.
Moujtaba Y KasmaniRyan A ZanderHokyung K ChungYao ChenAchia KhatunMartina DamoPaytsar TopchyanKaitlin E JohnsonDarya LevashovaRobert BurnsUlrike M LorenzVera L TarakanovaNikhil S JoshiSusan M KaechWeiguo CuiPublished in: The Journal of experimental medicine (2022)
Although recent evidence demonstrates heterogeneity among CD8+ T cells during chronic infection, developmental relationships and mechanisms underlying their fate decisions remain incompletely understood. Using single-cell RNA and TCR sequencing, we traced the clonal expansion and differentiation of CD8+ T cells during chronic LCMV infection. We identified immense clonal and phenotypic diversity, including a subset termed intermediate cells. Trajectory analyses and infection models showed intermediate cells arise from progenitor cells before bifurcating into terminal effector and exhausted subsets. Genetic ablation experiments identified that type I IFN drives exhaustion through an IRF7-dependent mechanism, possibly through an IFN-stimulated subset bridging progenitor and exhausted cells. Conversely, Zeb2 was critical for generating effector cells. Intriguingly, some T cell clones exhibited lineage bias. Mechanistically, we identified that TCR avidity correlates with an exhausted fate, whereas SHP-1 selectively restricts low-avidity effector cell accumulation. Thus, our work elucidates novel mechanisms underlying CD8+ T cell fate determination during persistent infection and suggests two potential pathways leading to exhaustion.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- cell fate
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- dendritic cells
- regulatory t cells
- immune response
- risk assessment
- cell death
- signaling pathway
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- stem cells
- cell proliferation
- mesenchymal stem cells
- long non coding rna
- high resolution
- bone marrow
- atrial fibrillation
- copy number
- cell therapy