Follicular T cells are clonally and transcriptionally distinct in B cell-driven mouse autoimmune disease

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Abstract

Pathogenic autoantibodies contribute to tissue damage and clinical decline in autoimmune disease. Follicular T cells are central regulators of germinal centers, although their contribution to autoantibody-mediated disease remains unclear. Here we perform single cell RNA and T cell receptor (TCR) sequencing of follicular T cells in a mouse model of autoantibody-mediated disease, allowing for analyses of paired transcriptomes and unbiased TCRαβ repertoires at single cell resolution. A minority of clonotypes are preferentially shared amongst autoimmune follicular T cells and clonotypic expansion is associated with differential gene signatures in autoimmune disease. Antigen prediction using algorithmic and machine learning approaches indicates convergence towards shared specificities between non-autoimmune and autoimmune follicular T cells. However, differential autoimmune transcriptional signatures are preserved even amongst follicular T cells with shared predicted specificities. These results demonstrate that follicular T cells are phenotypically distinct in B cell-driven autoimmune disease, providing potential therapeutic targets to modulate autoantibody development.

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Akama-Garren, E. H., van den Broek, T., Simoni, L., Castrillon, C., van der Poel, C. E., & Carroll, M. C. (2021). Follicular T cells are clonally and transcriptionally distinct in B cell-driven mouse autoimmune disease. Nature Communications, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-27035-8

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