Abstract

Abstract Crohn’s disease (CD) is a chronic transmural inflammation of intestinal segments caused by dysregulated interaction between microbiome and gut immune system. Recurrent/relapsing CD and resistance to medical treatments result in complications requiring surgery. High-dimensional single-cell profiling approaches, such as scRNA-seq and mass cytometry, have been recently performed on intestinal specimens from patients with IBD and controls. However, most of these studies have analyzed whole mucosal biopsies or the lamina propria (LP) compartment, while few have addressed the intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL) compartment. Here, we profiled T cells purified from the IEL and LP from terminal ileum resections of adult severe CD cases by single cell technologies. Our study defined a vast heterogeneity of T cell lineages in the IEL compartment. IEL included, among others, unique γδT cell subsets: NKp30+γδ T cells expressing RORγt, which produced IL-26 upon NKp30 engagement and a subset expressing PDGFD and CSF1, which may act on epithelial cells, IEL ILC1s, and macrophages, respectively. We have also observed long-lived memory TCF7+CD8+ T cells expressing DC chemoattractants and TFH subsets that may respond to distinct glutathione-conjugated lipids. CD IEL showed a significant increase of activated TH17, coupled with decreased CD8+ T cells, γδT cells, TFH, and Treg. Conversely, the LP showed increased CD8+ T cells and reduced CD4+ T cells with a relative increase of TH17 over Treg/TFH. Results provide an unbiased view of diversity of cell lineages and their functional states in the intestinal mucosa of controls and CD and identify an altered spatial distribution of T cell subsets between the IEL and the LP compartments.

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