Clonal Analysis of Regulatory T Cell Defect in Patients with Autoimmune Polyendocrine Syndrome Type 1 Suggests Intrathymic Impairment.
T-T KoivulaS M LaaksoH J NiemiEliisa KekäläinenP LaineL PaulinP AuvinenT P ArstilaPublished in: Scandinavian journal of immunology (2017)
Mutations in the autoimmune regulator gene disrupt thymic T cell development and negative selection, leading to the recessively inherited polyendocrine autoimmune disease autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome type 1 (APS-1). The patients also have a functional defect in the FOXP3+ regulatory T cell population, but its origin is unclear. Here, we have used T cell receptor sequencing to analyse the clonal relationship of major CD4+ T cell subsets in three patients and three healthy controls. The naive regulatory T cells showed little overlap with helper T cell subsets, supporting divergence in the thymus. The activated/memory regulatory T cell subset displayed more sharing with helper T cells, but was mainly recruited from the naive regulatory T cell population. These clonal patterns were very similar in both patients and controls. However, naive regulatory T cells isolated from the patients had a significantly longer T cell receptor complementarity-determining region 3 than any other population, suggesting failure of thymic selection. These data indicate that the peripheral differentiation of regulatory T cells in APS-1 patients is not different from that in healthy controls. Rather, the patients' naive regulatory T cells may have an intrinsic defect imprinted already in the thymus.
Keyphrases
- regulatory t cells
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- dendritic cells
- prognostic factors
- peritoneal dialysis
- multiple sclerosis
- immune response
- patient reported outcomes
- gene expression
- transcription factor
- machine learning
- high resolution
- dna methylation
- hiv infected
- copy number
- genome wide identification