Author:
Jiang Xu,Wang Shi-yu,Zhou Chen,Wu Jing-hua,Jiao Yu-hao,Lin Li-ya,Lu Xin,Yang Bo,Zhang Wei,Xiao Xin-yue,Li Yue-ting,Wu Xun-yao,Wang Xie,Chen Hua,Zhao Li-dan,Fei Yun-yun,Yang Hua-xia,Zhang Wen,Zhang Feng-chun,Chen Hui,Zhang Jian-min,Li Bin,Yang Huan-ming,Wang Jian,He Wei,Cao Xue-tao,Liu De-pei,Liu Xiao,Zhang Xuan
Abstract
AbstractThe pathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis (RA), a systemic autoimmune disease characterized by autoreactive T-cell accumulation and pro-inflammatory cytokine overproduction, is unclear. Systematically addressing T-cell receptor (TCR) repertoires of different CD4+ T-cell subsets could help understand RA pathogenesis. Here, peripheral CD4+ T cells from treatment-naïve RA patients and healthy controls were sorted into seven subsets including naïve, effector, central memory, effector memory (EMT), Th1, Th17, and regulatory T cells. T-cell receptor β chain repertoires were then analyzed by next-generation sequencing. We identified T-cell clonal expansion in EMT and Th17 cells, with highly similar TCR repertoires between them. Ex vivo experiments demonstrated the preferred differentiation from EMT to Th17 cells in RA. Moreover, TCR diversity in subsets including Th17 was negatively correlated with RA disease activity indices such as C-reactive protein and erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Thus, shared and abnormally expanded EMT and Th17 TCR repertoires might be pivotal for RA pathogenesis.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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