Title
Single-cell rnaseq profiling of human γδ t lymphocytes in virus-related cancers and covid-19 disease
Date Issued
01 November 2021
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Toulouse University
Toulouse University
Publisher(s)
MDPI
Abstract
The detailed characterization of human γδ T lymphocyte differentiation at the single-cell transcriptomic (scRNAseq) level in tumors and patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) requires both a reference differentiation trajectory of γδ T cells and a robust mapping method for additional γδ T lymphocytes. Here, we incepted such a method to characterize thousands of γδ T lymphocytes from (n = 95) patients with cancer or adult and pediatric COVID-19 disease. We found that cancer patients with human papillomavirus-positive head and neck squamous cell carcinoma and Epstein–Barr virus-positive Hodgkin’s lymphoma have γδ tumor-infiltrating T lymphocytes that are more prone to recirculate from the tumor and avoid exhaustion. In COVID-19, both TCRVγ9 and TCRVγnon9 subsets of γδ T lymphocytes relocalize from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) to the infected lung tissue, where their advanced differentiation, tissue residency, and exhaustion reflect T cell activation. Although severe COVID-19 disease increases both recruitment and exhaustion of γδ T lymphocytes in infected lung lesions but not blood, the anti-IL6R therapy with Tocilizumab promotes γδ T lymphocyte differentiation in patients with COVID-19. PBMC from pediatric patients with acute COVID-19 disease display similar γδ T cell lymphopenia to that seen in adult patients. However, blood γδ T cells from children with the COVID-19-related multisystem inflammatory syndrome are not lymphodepleted, but they are differentiated as in healthy PBMC. These findings suggest that some virus-induced memory γδ T lymphocytes durably persist in the blood of adults and could subsequently infiltrate and recirculate in tumors.
Volume
13
Issue
11
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Oncología
Biología celular, Microbiología
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85118743294
Source
Viruses
ISSN of the container
19994915
Sponsor(s)
This work was supported by institutional grants from the Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), the Université Toulouse 3-Paul Sabatier (UPS), the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); Laboratoire d’Excellence Toulouse Cancer (TOUCAN-2) under grant contract ANR11-LABX; the Fondation ARC under grant contract PGA1-RF2019-0208691; the Institut Universitaire du Cancer de Toulouse-Oncopole under contract CIEL; the Institut Carnot Lymphome under contract CALYM. This work was granted access to the HPC resources of CALMIP supercomputing center under allocation 2020-T19001. The authors thank CRCT collaborators for their support and their critical discussions.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus