Journal of Translational Medicine (Feb 2024)

Decoding the transcriptional heterogeneity, differentiation lineage, clinical significance in tissue-resident memory CD8 T cell of the small intestine by single-cell analysis

  • Jialing Fang,
  • Jun Lei,
  • Boxiao He,
  • Yankang Wu,
  • Peng Chen,
  • Zaiqiao Sun,
  • Ning Wu,
  • Yafei Huang,
  • Pengcheng Wei,
  • Lei Yin,
  • Yongshun Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12967-024-04978-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Resident memory T (Trm) cells which are specifically located in non-lymphoid tissues showed distinct phenotypes and functions compared to circulating memory T cells and were vital for the initiation of robust immune response within tissues. However, the heterogeneity in the transcriptional features, development pathways, and cancer response of Trm cells in the small intestine was not demonstrated. Here, we integrated scRNA-seq and scTCR-seq data pan-tissue T cells to explore the heterogeneity of Trm cells and their development pathways. Trm were enriched in tissue-specific immune response and those in the DUO specially interacted with B cells via TNF and MHC-I signatures. T cell lineage analyses demonstrated that Trm might be derived from the T_CD4/CD8 subset within the same organ or migrated from spleen and mesenteric lymph nodes. We compared the immune repertoire of Trm among organs and implied that clonotypes in both DUO and ILE were less expanded and hydrophilic TRB CDR3s were enriched in the DUO. We further demonstrated that Trm in the intestine infiltrated the colorectal cancer and several effector molecules were highly expressed. Finally, the TCGA dataset of colorectal cancer implied that the infiltration of Trm from the DUO and the ILE was beneficial for overall survival and the response to immune checkpoint blockade.

Keywords