Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine (Jan 2023)

Single-cell transcriptomes and T cell receptors of vaccine-expanded apolipoprotein B-specific T cells

  • Felix Sebastian Nettersheim,
  • Felix Sebastian Nettersheim,
  • Yanal Ghosheh,
  • Holger Winkels,
  • Holger Winkels,
  • Kouji Kobiyama,
  • Christopher Durant,
  • Sujit Silas Armstrong,
  • Simon Brunel,
  • Payel Roy,
  • Thamotharampillai Dileepan,
  • Marc K. Jenkins,
  • Dirk M. Zajonc,
  • Klaus Ley,
  • Klaus Ley,
  • Klaus Ley

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2022.1076808
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

Read online

Atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases are the major cause of death worldwide. CD4 T cells responding to Apolipoprotein B (ApoB), the core protein of most lipoproteins, have been identified as critical disease modulators. In healthy individuals, ApoB-reactive (ApoB+) CD4 T cells are mostly regulatory T cells (Tregs), which exert anti-inflammatory effects. Yet, they may obtain pro-inflammatory features and thus become proatherogenic. Evidence from animal studies suggests that vaccination against certain major histocompatibility complex (MHC) II-binding ApoB peptides induces an expansion of ApoB+ Tregs and thus confers atheroprotection. To date, in-depth phenotyping of vaccine-expanded ApoB+ T cells has not yet been performed. To this end, we vaccinated C57BL/6J mice with the ApoB-peptide P6 (ApoB978–993 TGAYSNASSTESASY) and performed single-cell RNA sequencing of tetramer-sorted P6+ T cells. P6+ cells were clonally expanded (one major, two minor clones) and formed a transcriptional cluster distinct from clusters mainly containing non-expanded P6+ and P6– cells. Transcriptomic profiling revealed that most expanded P6+ cells had a strong Treg signature and highly expressed genes mediating suppressive functions. Yet, some expanded P6+ cells only had a residual Treg signature and expressed genes related to T helper 1 (TH1) cells, which are proatherogenic. Modeling the T cell receptor (TCR) and P6:MHC-II interaction showed that only three amino acid residues in the α and β chain contact the P6 peptide in the MHC-II groove and thus determine the specificity of this TCR to P6. Our data begin to reveal the vaccination-induced response to an ApoB epitope.

Keywords