Single-cell transcriptome profiling and chromatin accessibility reveal an exhausted regulatory CD4+ T cell subset in systemic lupus erythematosus

Basic information
Cell
34,176
Sample
16

Technology
10X Genomics
Omics
scRNA-seq
Source
PBMCs

Dataset ID
36351407
Platform
Illumina HiSeq X-Ten
Species
Human
Disease
SLE,Healthy
Age range
16 - 45
Update date
2022-11-08
Summary

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a chronic autoimmune disease, and CD4+ T cells are known to promote SLE development. Here, we explore heterogeneities in the CD4+ T cell regulome and their associations with SLE pathogenesis by performing assay for transposase-accessible chromatin with high-throughput sequencing (ATAC-seq) and single-cell transcriptome sequencing (single-cell RNA sequencing [scRNA-seq]) of peripheral CD4+ T cells from 72 SLE patients and 30 healthy controls. Chromatin accessibility signatures of CD4+ T cells are correlated with disease severity. Further, we generate 34,176 single-cell transcriptomes of healthy and SLE CD4+ T cells and reveal transcriptional dysfunction of regulatory T (Treg) cells, identifying two Treg subpopulations, among which the CCR7lowCD74hi Treg subgroup features type I interferon-induced functional exhaustion in SLE patients. These transcriptome-level findings for SLE Tregs are mirrored in trends from the ATAC-seq data. Our study establishes a rich empirical foundation for understanding SLE and uncovers previously unknown contributions of Treg with exhaustion-like properties to SLE pathogenesis.

Overall design

Chromatin accessibility and single-cell transcriptome reveal novel subsets of CD4+ T cell associated with therapeutic process in systemic lupus erythematosus patients

Contributors

To be supplemented.

Contact

To be supplemented.

snRNA-Seq
Sample nameSample titleDiseaseGenderAgeSourceTreatmentTechnologyPlatformOmicsSample IDDataset IDAction
No data available