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Single cell analysis of host response to helminth infection reveals the clonal breadth, heterogeneity, and tissue-specific programming of the responding CD4+ T cell repertoire

  • Ivy K. Brown
  • , Nathan Dyjack
  • , Mindy M. Miller
  • , Harsha Krovi
  • , Cydney Rios
  • , Rachel Woolaver
  • , Laura Harmacek
  • , Ting Hui Tu
  • , Brian P. O’Connor
  • , Thomas Danhorn
  • , Brian Vestal
  • , Laurent Gapin
  • , Clemencia Pinilla
  • , Max A. Seibold
  • , James Scott-Browne
  • , Radleigh G. Santos
  • , R. Lee Reinhardt

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The CD4+ T cell response is critical to host protection against helminth infection. How this response varies across different hosts and tissues remains an important gap in our understanding. Using IL-4-reporter mice to identify responding CD4+ T cells to Nippostrongylus brasiliensis infection, T cell receptor sequencing paired with novel clustering algorithms revealed a broadly reactive and clonally diverse CD4+ T cell response. While the most prevalent clones and clonotypes exhibited some tissue selectivity, most were observed to reside in both the lung and lung-draining lymph nodes. Antigen-reactivity of the broader repertoires was predicted to be shared across both tissues and individual mice. Transcriptome, trajectory, and chromatin accessibility analysis of lung and lymph-node repertoires revealed three unique but related populations of responding IL-4+ CD4+ T cells consistent with T follicular helper, T helper 2, and a transitional population sharing similarity with both populations. The shared antigen reactivity of lymph node and lung repertoires combined with the adoption of tissue-specific gene programs allows for the pairing of cellular and humoral responses critical to the orchestration of anti-helminth immunity.

Original languageAmerican English
Article numbere1009602
JournalPLOS Pathogens
Volume17
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 1 2021

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