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Human γδ T‐cell receptor repertoire is shaped by influenza viruses, age and tissue compartmentalisation

BACKGROUND: Although γδ T cells comprise up to 10% of human peripheral blood T cells, questions remain regarding their role in disease states and T‐cell receptor (TCR) clonal expansions. We dissected anti‐viral functions of human γδ T cells towards influenza viruses and defined influenza‐reactive γδ...

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Autores principales: Sant, Sneha, Jenkins, Misty R, Dash, Pradyot, Watson, Katherine A, Wang, Zhongfang, Pizzolla, Angela, Koutsakos, Marios, Nguyen, Thi HO, Lappas, Martha, Crowe, Jane, Loudovaris, Tom, Mannering, Stuart I, Westall, Glen P, Kotsimbos, Tom C, Cheng, Allen C, Wakim, Linda, Doherty, Peter C, Thomas, Paul G, Loh, Liyen, Kedzierska, Katherine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6756999/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31559018
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cti2.1079
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author Sant, Sneha
Jenkins, Misty R
Dash, Pradyot
Watson, Katherine A
Wang, Zhongfang
Pizzolla, Angela
Koutsakos, Marios
Nguyen, Thi HO
Lappas, Martha
Crowe, Jane
Loudovaris, Tom
Mannering, Stuart I
Westall, Glen P
Kotsimbos, Tom C
Cheng, Allen C
Wakim, Linda
Doherty, Peter C
Thomas, Paul G
Loh, Liyen
Kedzierska, Katherine
author_facet Sant, Sneha
Jenkins, Misty R
Dash, Pradyot
Watson, Katherine A
Wang, Zhongfang
Pizzolla, Angela
Koutsakos, Marios
Nguyen, Thi HO
Lappas, Martha
Crowe, Jane
Loudovaris, Tom
Mannering, Stuart I
Westall, Glen P
Kotsimbos, Tom C
Cheng, Allen C
Wakim, Linda
Doherty, Peter C
Thomas, Paul G
Loh, Liyen
Kedzierska, Katherine
author_sort Sant, Sneha
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Although γδ T cells comprise up to 10% of human peripheral blood T cells, questions remain regarding their role in disease states and T‐cell receptor (TCR) clonal expansions. We dissected anti‐viral functions of human γδ T cells towards influenza viruses and defined influenza‐reactive γδ TCRs in the context of γδ‐TCRs across the human lifespan. METHODS: We performed (51)Cr‐killing assay and single‐cell time‐lapse live video microscopy to define mechanisms underlying γδ T‐cell‐mediated killing of influenza‐infected targets. We assessed cytotoxic profiles of γδ T cells in influenza‐infected patients and IFN‐γ production towards influenza‐infected lung epithelial cells. Using single‐cell RT‐PCR, we characterised paired TCRγδ clonotypes for influenza‐reactive γδ T cells in comparison with TCRs from healthy neonates, adults, elderly donors and tissues. RESULTS: We provide the first visual evidence of γδ T‐cell‐mediated killing of influenza‐infected targets and show distinct features to those reported for CD8(+) T cells. γδ T cells displayed poly‐cytotoxic profiles in influenza‐infected patients and produced IFN‐γ towards influenza‐infected cells. These IFN‐γ‐producing γδ T cells were skewed towards the γ9δ2 TCRs, particularly expressing the public GV9‐TCRγ, capable of pairing with numerous TCR‐δ chains, suggesting their significant role in γδ T‐cell immunity. Neonatal γδ T cells displayed extensive non‐overlapping TCRγδ repertoires, while adults had enriched γ9δ2‐pairings with diverse CDR3γδ regions. Conversely, the elderly showed distinct γδ‐pairings characterised by large clonal expansions, a profile also prominent in adult tissues. CONCLUSION: Human TCRγδ repertoire is shaped by age, tissue compartmentalisation and the individual's history of infection, suggesting that these somewhat enigmatic γδ T cells indeed respond to antigen challenge.
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spelling pubmed-67569992019-09-26 Human γδ T‐cell receptor repertoire is shaped by influenza viruses, age and tissue compartmentalisation Sant, Sneha Jenkins, Misty R Dash, Pradyot Watson, Katherine A Wang, Zhongfang Pizzolla, Angela Koutsakos, Marios Nguyen, Thi HO Lappas, Martha Crowe, Jane Loudovaris, Tom Mannering, Stuart I Westall, Glen P Kotsimbos, Tom C Cheng, Allen C Wakim, Linda Doherty, Peter C Thomas, Paul G Loh, Liyen Kedzierska, Katherine Clin Transl Immunology Original Articles BACKGROUND: Although γδ T cells comprise up to 10% of human peripheral blood T cells, questions remain regarding their role in disease states and T‐cell receptor (TCR) clonal expansions. We dissected anti‐viral functions of human γδ T cells towards influenza viruses and defined influenza‐reactive γδ TCRs in the context of γδ‐TCRs across the human lifespan. METHODS: We performed (51)Cr‐killing assay and single‐cell time‐lapse live video microscopy to define mechanisms underlying γδ T‐cell‐mediated killing of influenza‐infected targets. We assessed cytotoxic profiles of γδ T cells in influenza‐infected patients and IFN‐γ production towards influenza‐infected lung epithelial cells. Using single‐cell RT‐PCR, we characterised paired TCRγδ clonotypes for influenza‐reactive γδ T cells in comparison with TCRs from healthy neonates, adults, elderly donors and tissues. RESULTS: We provide the first visual evidence of γδ T‐cell‐mediated killing of influenza‐infected targets and show distinct features to those reported for CD8(+) T cells. γδ T cells displayed poly‐cytotoxic profiles in influenza‐infected patients and produced IFN‐γ towards influenza‐infected cells. These IFN‐γ‐producing γδ T cells were skewed towards the γ9δ2 TCRs, particularly expressing the public GV9‐TCRγ, capable of pairing with numerous TCR‐δ chains, suggesting their significant role in γδ T‐cell immunity. Neonatal γδ T cells displayed extensive non‐overlapping TCRγδ repertoires, while adults had enriched γ9δ2‐pairings with diverse CDR3γδ regions. Conversely, the elderly showed distinct γδ‐pairings characterised by large clonal expansions, a profile also prominent in adult tissues. CONCLUSION: Human TCRγδ repertoire is shaped by age, tissue compartmentalisation and the individual's history of infection, suggesting that these somewhat enigmatic γδ T cells indeed respond to antigen challenge. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019-09-23 /pmc/articles/PMC6756999/ /pubmed/31559018 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cti2.1079 Text en © 2019 The Authors. Clinical & Translational Immunology published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of Australian and New Zealand Society for Immunology Inc. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Sant, Sneha
Jenkins, Misty R
Dash, Pradyot
Watson, Katherine A
Wang, Zhongfang
Pizzolla, Angela
Koutsakos, Marios
Nguyen, Thi HO
Lappas, Martha
Crowe, Jane
Loudovaris, Tom
Mannering, Stuart I
Westall, Glen P
Kotsimbos, Tom C
Cheng, Allen C
Wakim, Linda
Doherty, Peter C
Thomas, Paul G
Loh, Liyen
Kedzierska, Katherine
Human γδ T‐cell receptor repertoire is shaped by influenza viruses, age and tissue compartmentalisation
title Human γδ T‐cell receptor repertoire is shaped by influenza viruses, age and tissue compartmentalisation
title_full Human γδ T‐cell receptor repertoire is shaped by influenza viruses, age and tissue compartmentalisation
title_fullStr Human γδ T‐cell receptor repertoire is shaped by influenza viruses, age and tissue compartmentalisation
title_full_unstemmed Human γδ T‐cell receptor repertoire is shaped by influenza viruses, age and tissue compartmentalisation
title_short Human γδ T‐cell receptor repertoire is shaped by influenza viruses, age and tissue compartmentalisation
title_sort human γδ t‐cell receptor repertoire is shaped by influenza viruses, age and tissue compartmentalisation
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6756999/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31559018
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cti2.1079
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