4.6 Article

Two distinct colonic CD14+ subsets characterized by single-cell RNA profiling in Crohn's disease

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MUCOSAL IMMUNOLOGY
卷 12, 期 3, 页码 703-719

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NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41385-018-0126-0

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资金

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (MOP) [130533]
  2. Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship
  3. National Human Genome Research Institute Centers of Excellence in Genomics Science [P50 HG006193]
  4. National Human Genome Research grant [T32 HG002295]

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Inflammatory bowel diseases are associated with dysregulated immune responses in the intestinal tissue. Four molecularly identified macrophage subsets control immune homeostasis in healthy gut. However, the specific roles and transcriptomic profiles of the phenotypically heterogeneous CD14(+) macrophage-like population in inflamed gut remain to be investigated in Crohn's disease (CD). Here we identified two phenotypically, morphologically and functionally distinct colonic HLADR(+)SIRP alpha(+)CD14(+) subpopulations that were further characterized using single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNAseq) in CD. Frequencies of CD64(hi)CD163(-/dim) cells selectively augmented in inflamed colon and correlated with endoscopic score of disease severity. IL-1 beta and IL-23-producing CD64(hi)CD163(-/dim) cells predominated over TNF-alpha-producing CD64(hi)CD163(hi) cells in lesions. Purified inflammatory monocyte-like CD163(-), but not macrophage-like CD163(hi) cells, through IL-1 beta, promoted Th17/Th1 but not Th1 responses in tissue memory CD4(+)T cells. Unsupervised scRNAseq analysis that captures the entire HLADR(+)SIRP alpha(+) population revealed six clusters, two of which were enriched in either CD163(-) or CD163(hi) cells, and best defined by TREM1/FCAR/FCN1/IL1RN or CD209/MERTK/MRCI/CD163L1 genes, respectively. Selected newly identified discriminating markers were used beyond CD163 to isolate cells that shared pro-Th17/Th1 function with CD163(-) cells. In conclusion, a molecularly distinct pro-inflammatory CD14(+) subpopulation accumulates in inflamed colon, drives intestinal inflammatory T-cell responses, and thus, might contribute to CD disease severity.

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