作者
Giovanni Galletti,Gabriele De Simone,Emilia Maria Cristina Mazza,Simone Puccio,Claudia Mezzanotte,Timothy Bi,Alexey N. Davydov,Maria Metsger,Eloise Scamardella,Giorgia Alvisi,Fédérica De Paoli,Veronica Zanon,Alice Scarpa,Barbara Camisa,Federico Colombo,Achille Anselmo,Clelia Peano,Sara Polletti,Domenico Mavilio,Luca Gattinoni,Shannon K. Boi,Ben Youngblood,Rhiannon E. Jones,Duncan M. Baird,Emma Gostick,Sian Llewellyn‐Lacey,Kristin Ladell,David A. Price,Dmitriy M. Chudakov,Evan W. Newell,Monica Casucci,Enrico Lugli
摘要
T cell memory relies on the generation of antigen-specific progenitors with stem-like properties. However, the identity of these progenitors has remained unclear, precluding a full understanding of the differentiation trajectories that underpin the heterogeneity of antigen-experienced T cells. We used a systematic approach guided by single-cell RNA-sequencing data to map the organizational structure of the human CD8+ memory T cell pool under physiological conditions. We identified two previously unrecognized subsets of clonally, epigenetically, functionally, phenotypically and transcriptionally distinct stem-like CD8+ memory T cells. Progenitors lacking the inhibitory receptors programmed death-1 (PD-1) and T cell immunoreceptor with Ig and ITIM domains (TIGIT) were committed to a functional lineage, whereas progenitors expressing PD-1 and TIGIT were committed to a dysfunctional, exhausted-like lineage. Collectively, these data reveal the existence of parallel differentiation programs in the human CD8+ memory T cell pool, with potentially broad implications for the development of immunotherapies and vaccines. The identity of stem-cell memory progenitor cells has been unclear. Lugli and colleagues use high-dimensional approaches to identify two new progenitor populations of human T cells—one giving rise to a functional lineage, the other to an exhausted-like one.