The immune profile of circulating autoreactive CD4 T cells is imprinted through tissue activation during autoimmune liver diseases

Author:

Cardon Anaïs,Guinebretière Thomas,Dong Chuang,Gil Laurine,Ado Sakina,Gavlovsky Pierre-jean,Braud Martin,Danger Richard,Schultheiß Christoph,Doméné Aurélie,Paul-Gilloteaux PerrineORCID,Chevalier Caroline,Bernier Laura,Judor Jean-Paul,Fourgeux Cynthia,Imbert Astrid,Khaldi Marion,Bardou-Jacquet Edouard,Elkrief Laure,Lannes Adrien,Silvain Christine,Schnee Matthieu,Tanne Florence,Vavasseur Fabienne,Brusselle Lucas,Brouard Sophie,Kwok William W,Mosnier Jean-François,Lohse Ansgar,Poschmann Jeremie,Binder Mascha,Gournay Jérôme,Conchon Sophie,Milpied PierreORCID,Renand Amédée

Abstract

AbstractAutoimmune liver diseases (AILD) are immune-mediated disorders in which CD4 T cells play a central role. However, the link between circulating self-antigen-specific CD4 T cells and the targeted tissue has not been extensively studied in AILD. We hypothesized that circulating autoreactive CD4 T cells were clonally and functionally related to dominant intra-hepatic pathogenic CD4 T cell clones. Single cell transcriptomic analysis of circulating self-antigen-specific CD4 T cells revealed a specific B-helper and immuno-exhausted transcriptional profile, which was conserved for different autoantigens, but distinct from several other types of foreign antigen specificities. In the blood, the dominant hepatic CD4 T cell clones had a similar transcriptomic signature and were enriched in the PD-1+TIGIT+HLA-DR+CD4 T cell subset. In a mouse model, antigen-specific CD4 T cells acquired the immuno-exhausted transcriptional profile when they accumulated in the liver after local antigen reactivity. Locally, immune checkpoint molecules controlled the response of antigen-specific CD4 T cells responsible for liver damage. Our study reveals the origin and biology of liver-derived autoreactive CD4 T cells in the blood of AILD patients that are imprinted by the liver environment, and suggest a dysregulation of the immune checkpoint molecules pathways. Our study enables tracking and isolating circulating autoreactive CD4 T cells for future diagnostic and therapeutic purposes.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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