Single‐Cell Sequencing Reveals Functional Alterations in Tuberculosis

Author:

Lyu Mengyuan1,Xu Gaolian2ORCID,Zhou Jian3,Reboud Julien4ORCID,Wang Yili1,Lai Hongli1,Chen Yi1,Zhou Yanbing1,Zhu Guiying2,Cooper Jonathan M.4ORCID,Ying Binwu1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Laboratory Medicine West China Hospital Sichuan University Chengdu Sichuan 610041 P. R. China

2. School of Biomedical Engineering/Med‐X Research Institute Shanghai Jiao Tong University Shanghai 200030 P. R. China

3. Department of Thoracic Surgery West China Hospital Sichuan University Chengdu Sichuan 610041 P. R. China

4. Division of Biomedical Engineering University of Glasgow Glasgow G12 8LT United Kingdom

Abstract

AbstractDespite its importance, the functional heterogeneity surrounding the dynamics of interactions between mycobacterium tuberculosis and human immune cells in determining host immune strength and tuberculosis (TB) outcomes, remains far from understood. This work now describes the development of a new technological platform to elucidate the immune function differences in individuals with TB, integrating single‐cell RNA sequencing and cell surface antibody sequencing to provide both genomic and phenotypic information from the same samples. Single‐cell analysis of 23 990 peripheral blood mononuclear cells from a new cohort of primary TB patients and healthy controls enables to not only show four distinct immune phenotypes (TB, myeloid, and natural killer (NK) cells), but also determine the dynamic changes in cell population abundance, gene expression, developmental trajectory, transcriptomic regulation, and cell–cell signaling. In doing so, TB‐related changes in immune cell functions demonstrate that the immune response is mediated through host T cells, myeloid cells, and NK cells, with TB patients showing decreased naive, cytotoxicity, and memory functions of T cells, rather than their immunoregulatory function. The platform also has the potential to identify new targets for immunotherapeutic treatment strategies to restore T cells from dysfunctional or exhausted states.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

Medical Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),General Materials Science,General Chemical Engineering,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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