Lung NR3C1+ and CXCR6 High CD4 T cells distinguish immunopathogenesis of human emphysema
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ABSTRACT: There is a significant knowledge gap in how T cells promote emphysema in smokers with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA seq) analysis of human samples and relevant clinical data could provide new mechanistic insights into disease pathogenesis. We generated an in-house human lung scRNA seq dataset with extensive disease characteristic annotation and analyzed a second independent scRNA seq dataset to examine the pathophysiological role of T cells in emphysema. Comparisons of pulmonary immune landscapes in emphysematous (E)-COPD, non-emphysematous (NE)-COPD, and controls showed positive enrichment of T cells in E-COPD. Pathway analyses identified upregulated inflammatory states in CD4 T cells a distinguishing feature of E-COPD. Compared to controls, glucocorticoid receptor NR3C1 expressing CD4 T cells were enriched in NE-COPD but were reduced in E-COPD. Interactions between macrophages and NR3C1+ CD4 T cell subset via CXCL signaling were strongly predicted in E-COPD but were absent in NE-COPD and controls. The relative abundance of CD4 CXCR6high effector memory T cells positively correlated with preserved lung function in E-COPD but not in NE-COPD. Overall, these findings suggest that NR3C1+ and CXCR6high effector memory subsets of CD4 T cells distinguish the immune-pathophysiological features of emphysema in human lungs. Molecular targeting of relevant T cell subsets in emphysema could provide new therapeutic opportunities.
ORGANISM(S): Homo sapiens
PROVIDER: GSE302339 | GEO | 2025/11/13
REPOSITORIES: GEO
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