Somatic mutations associate with clonal expansion of CD8 + T cells.
Sofie A LundgrenMikko MyllymäkiTimo JärvinenMikko A I KeränenJason TheodoropoulosJohannes SmolanderDaehong KimUrpu SalmenniemiGunilla WalldinPaula SavolaTiina KelkkaHanna L M RajalaEva Hellström LindbergMaija Itälä-RemesMatti KankainenMohamed El MissiryPublished in: Science advances (2024)
Somatic mutations in T cells can cause cancer but also have implications for immunological diseases and cell therapies. The mutation spectrum in nonmalignant T cells is unclear. Here, we examined somatic mutations in CD4 + and CD8 + T cells from 90 patients with hematological and immunological disorders and used T cell receptor (TCR) and single-cell sequencing to link mutations with T cell expansions and phenotypes. CD8 + cells had a higher mutation burden than CD4 + cells. Notably, the biggest variant allele frequency (VAF) of non-synonymous variants was higher than synonymous variants in CD8 + T cells, indicating non-random occurrence. The non-synonymous VAF in CD8 + T cells strongly correlated with the TCR frequency, but not age. We identified mutations in pathways essential for T cell function and often affected lymphoid neoplasia. Single-cell sequencing revealed cytotoxic T EMRA phenotypes of mutated T cells. Our findings suggest that somatic mutations contribute to CD8 + T cell expansions without malignant transformation.