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Do Virus-specific memory T cells contribute to inclusion body myositis?
Conference presentation

Do Virus-specific memory T cells contribute to inclusion body myositis?

Anu Sooda, Emily McLeish, Nataliya Slater, Kelly Beer, Annik Panicker, Merrilee Needham and Jerome Coudert
4th Global Conference on Myositis (GCOM) (Prague, Czech Republic, 06/06/2022–09/06/2022)
06/2022

Abstract

Background. Inclusion body myositis (IBM) is the most common inflammatory muscle diseases that primarily affects the elderly. It is characterised by autoim¬mune aggression and degeneration of skeletal muscles, which leads to severe disability over time. Although the aetiology of IBM is uncertain, numerous lines of evidence point to T cells playing a pathogenic key role. One of the major ques¬tions that remains unsolved regarding IBM muscle-invading T cells is the nature of the antigen that drives their autoreactivity. We hypothesised that the analysis of T cells’ T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire will give insights into their specific¬ity. We used high-throughput sequencing of TCRβ chains in T cells isolated from muscle biopsies and matched blood samples to compare T cell clonal profiles within the inflammation-affected muscle tissues and systemically. Methods. Blood and muscle samples were collected on the same days for each of the four donors. Muscle-invading T cells were isolated as bulk while peripheral blood mononuclear cells were subjected to CD4+ and CD8+ T cell separation. The TCRβ sequencing was performed using the high-throughput Illumina Miseq platform. Downstream data analysis of TCRβ repertoires was performed using in-house VGAS tool, Immunarch R package and VDJtools. HLA haplotype of each donor was determined by high resolution typing of HLA class I and II al¬leles using Illumina Miseq platform in an American Society for Histocompat¬ibility and Immunogenetics (ASHI)-accredited laboratory. Results. Analysis of muscle-T cells for TCR repertoire overlap revealed shared clonotypes between patients. A unique TCRβ sequence was shared between pa¬tients 1, 3, and 4, while in patient 2, although this sequence was not found in the muscle, it ranked as a predominant clone in the blood. The patients 1 and 3 displayed nine sequences in common, as well as their top three TCRβ sequences. Furthermore, analysis of TCR repertoire usage in the corresponding blood sam¬ples showed common clonotypes between muscle and blood, but at higher fre¬quency in muscles indicating that a preferential expansion occurred in this tissue. Moreover, querying the top five dominant TCRβ CDR3 sequences of muscle from each patient in a curated database of TCR identified multiple highly similar sequences with known specificity for antigens derived from virus and muscle proteins, especially in the CD8+ T cell subset. In patient 1 and 3, the topmost clone showed a high level of similarity with a CDR3 specific for CMV-derived antigen as well as self-antigens derived from protein phosphatase 1F (PPM1F) and A-kinase anchor protein 9 (AKAP9). The HLA alleles reported to present these autoantigens matched with the HLA haplotype of patient 3. On the other hand, for patient 2, we identified a clone bearing high CDR3 similarity with known sequences documented to be associated with HIV-1 and EBV-derived an¬tigens, and another CDR3 that exactly matched a sequence specific for a gluten-derived peptide. Interestingly, this patient carries HLA-DQ9 which is a reported risk factor for celiac disease. Conclusions. Our findings identified public TCRs in IBM muscle, and the pres¬ence of expanded T cell clones harbouring TCR sequences with striking similari¬ties between virus and muscle-derived antigens, suggesting that an underlying molecular mimicry mechanism may generate autoreactive T cells.

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