JCI Insight (Nov 2023)

Islet-autoreactive CD4+ T cells are linked with response to alefacept in type 1 diabetes

  • Elisa Balmas,
  • Janice Chen,
  • Alex K. Hu,
  • Hannah A. DeBerg,
  • Mario G. Rosasco,
  • Vivian H. Gersuk,
  • Elisavet Serti,
  • Cate Speake,
  • Carla J. Greenbaum,
  • Gerald T. Nepom,
  • Peter S. Linsley,
  • Karen Cerosaletti

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 21

Abstract

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Variation in the preservation of β cell function in clinical trials in type 1 diabetes (T1D) has emphasized the need to define biomarkers to predict treatment response. The T1DAL trial targeted T cells with alefacept (LFA-3–Ig) and demonstrated C-peptide preservation in approximately 30% of new-onset T1D individuals. We analyzed islet antigen–reactive (IAR) CD4+ T cells in PBMC samples collected prior to treatment from alefacept- and placebo-treated individuals using flow cytometry and single-cell RNA sequencing. IAR CD4+ T cells at baseline had heterogeneous phenotypes. Transcript profiles formed phenotypic clusters of cells along a trajectory based on increasing maturation and activation, and T cell receptor (TCR) chains showed clonal expansion. Notably, the frequency of IAR CD4+ T cells with a memory phenotype and a unique transcript profile (cluster 3) were inversely correlated with C-peptide preservation in alefacept-treated, but not placebo-treated, individuals. Cluster 3 cells had a proinflammatory phenotype characterized by expression of the transcription factor BHLHE40 and the cytokines GM-CSF and TNF-α, and shared TCR chains with effector memory–like clusters. Our results suggest IAR CD4+ T cells as a potential baseline biomarker of response to therapies targeting the CD2 pathway and warrant investigation for other T cell–related therapies.

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