Injury-induced myosin-specific tissue-resident memory T cells drive immune checkpoint inhibitor myocarditis

Cardiac myosin-specific (MyHC) T cells drive the disease pathogenesis of immune checkpoint inhibitor-associated myocarditis (ICI-myocarditis). To determine whether MyHC T cells are tissue-resident memory T (T ) cells, we characterized cardiac T cells in naive mice and established that they have a di...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2024-10, Vol.121 (42), p.e2323052121
Hauptverfasser: Kalinoski, Hannah, Daoud, Abdel, Rusinkevich, Vitali, Jurčová, Ivana, Talor, Monica V, Welsh, Robin A, Hughes, David, Zemanová, Kateřina, Stříž, Ilja, Hooper, Jody E, Kautzner, Josef, Peichl, Petr, Melenovský, Vojtěch, Won, Taejoon, Čiháková, Daniela
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cardiac myosin-specific (MyHC) T cells drive the disease pathogenesis of immune checkpoint inhibitor-associated myocarditis (ICI-myocarditis). To determine whether MyHC T cells are tissue-resident memory T (T ) cells, we characterized cardiac T cells in naive mice and established that they have a distinct phenotypic and transcriptional profile that can be defined by their upregulation of CD69, PD-1, and CXCR6. We then investigated the effects of cardiac injury through a modified experimental autoimmune myocarditis mouse model and an ischemia-reperfusion injury mouse model and determined that cardiac inflammation induces the recruitment of autoreactive MyHC T cells, which coexpress PD-1 and CD69. To investigate whether the recruited MyHC T cells could increase susceptibility to ICI-myocarditis, we developed a two-hit ICI-myocarditis mouse model where cardiac injury was induced, mice were allowed to recover, and then were treated with anti-PD-1 antibodies. We determined that mice who recover from cardiac injury are more susceptible to ICI-myocarditis development. We found that murine and human T cells share a similar location in the heart and aggregate along the perimyocardium. We phenotyped cells obtained from pericardial fluid from patients diagnosed with dilated cardiomyopathy and ischemic cardiomyopathy and established that pericardial T cells are predominantly CD69 T cells that up-regulate PD-1. Finally, we determined that human pericardial macrophages produce IL-15, which supports and maintains pericardial T cells.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2323052121