Modulation of tissue resident memory T cells by glucocorticoids after acute cellular rejection in lung transplantation

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Abstract

Acute cellular rejection is common after lung transplantation and is associated with an increased risk of early chronic rejection. We present combined single-cell RNA and TCR sequencing on recipient-derived T cells obtained from the bronchoalveolar lavage of three lung transplant recipients with rejection and compare them with T cells obtained from the same patients after treatment of rejection with high-dose systemic glucocorticoids. At the time of rejection, we found an oligoclonal expansion of cytotoxic CD8+ T cells that all persisted as tissue resident memory T cells after successful treatment. Persisting CD8+ allograft-resident T cells have reduced gene expression for cytotoxic mediators after therapy with glucocorticoids but accumulate around airways. This clonal expansion is discordant with circulating T cell clonal expansion at the time of rejection, suggesting in situ expansion. We thus highlight the accumulation of cytotoxic, recipient-derived tissue resident memory T cells within the lung allograft that persist despite the administration of high-dose systemic glucocorticoids. The long-term clinical consequences of this persistence have yet to be characterized.

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Snyder, M. E., Moghbeli, K., Bondonese, A., Craig, A., Popescu, I., Fan, L., … McDyer, J. F. (2022). Modulation of tissue resident memory T cells by glucocorticoids after acute cellular rejection in lung transplantation. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 219(4). https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20212059

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