Back to Search Start Over

The role of CD8+ T cell clones in immune thrombocytopenia

Authors :
Amna Malik
Anwar A. Sayed
Panpan Han
Michelle M.H. Tan
Eleanor Watt
Adela Constantinescu-Bercu
Alexander T.H. Cocker
Ahmad Khoder
Rocel Christine Saputil
Emma V. Thorley
Ariam Teklemichael
Yunchuan Ding
Alice C.J. Hart
Haiyu Zhang
Wayne A. Mitchell
Nesrina Imami
James T.B. Crawley
Isabelle I. Salles-Crawley
James B. Bussel
James L. Zehnder
Stuart Paul Adams
Bing M. Zhang
Nichola Cooper
Source :
Blood.
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2023.

Abstract

Immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) is traditionally considered an antibody-mediated disease. However, a number of features suggest alternative mechanisms of platelet destruction. In this study, we use a multi-dimensional approach to explore the role of cytotoxic CD8+ T cells in ITP. We characterised patients with ITP and compared them to age-matched controls using immunophenotyping, next-generation sequencing of T cell receptor (TCR) genes, single-cell RNA sequencing, and functional T cell and platelet assays. We found that adults with chronic ITP have increased polyfunctional, terminally differentiated effector memory CD8+ T cells (CD45RA+CD62L-) expressing intracellular interferon-g, tumour necrosis factor-a, and Granzyme B defining them as TEMRA cells. These TEMRA cells expand when the platelet count falls and show no evidence of physiological exhaustion. Deep sequencing of the T cell receptor showed expanded T cell clones in patients with ITP. T cell clones persisted over many years, were more prominent in patients with refractory disease, and expanded when the platelet count was low. Combined single-cell RNA and TCR sequencing of CD8+ T cells confirmed that the expanded clones are TEMRA cells. Using in vitro model systems, we show that CD8+ T cells from patients with ITP form aggregates with autologous platelets, release interferon-g and trigger platelet activation and apoptosis through TCR-mediated release of cytotoxic granules. These findings of clonally expanded CD8+ T cells causing platelet activation and apoptosis provide an antibody-independent mechanism of platelet destruction, indicating that targeting specific T-cell clones could be a novel therapeutic approach for patients with refractory ITP.

Details

ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2a66879e7fbf40d1a945d07bd6131a33