Transcriptome dynamics of CD4+ T cells during malaria maps gradual transit from effector to memory

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Abstract

The dynamics of CD4+ T cell memory development remain to be examined at genome scale. In malaria-endemic regions, antimalarial chemoprevention protects long after its cessation and associates with effects on CD4+ T cells. We applied single-cell RNA sequencing and computational modelling to track memory development during Plasmodium infection and treatment. In the absence of central memory precursors, two trajectories developed as T helper 1 (TH1) and follicular helper T (TFH) transcriptomes contracted and partially coalesced over three weeks. Progeny of single clones populated TH1 and TFH trajectories, and fate-mapping suggested that there was minimal lineage plasticity. Relationships between TFH and central memory were revealed, with antimalarials modulating these responses and boosting TH1 recall. Finally, single-cell epigenomics confirmed that heterogeneity among effectors was partially reset in memory. Thus, the effector-to-memory transition in CD4+ T cells is gradual during malaria and is modulated by antiparasitic drugs. Graphical user interfaces are presented for examining gene-expression dynamics and gene–gene correlations (http://haquelab.mdhs.unimelb.edu.au/cd4_memory/).

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Soon, M. S. F., Lee, H. J., Engel, J. A., Straube, J., Thomas, B. S., Pernold, C. P. S., … Haque, A. (2020). Transcriptome dynamics of CD4+ T cells during malaria maps gradual transit from effector to memory. Nature Immunology, 21(12), 1597–1610. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41590-020-0800-8

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