系统性T细胞受体谱分析揭示癫痫诊断和脑萎缩的适应性免疫激活和潜在免疫特征。

IF 3.9 2区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Yong-Won Shin, Sang Bin Hong, Yong Woo Shin, Inpyeong Hwang, Jaeseong Oh, Jihyeon Choi, Narae Kim, Jangsup Moon, Keun-Hwa Jung, Kyung-Il Park, Ki-Young Jung, Kon Chu, Sang Kun Lee
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:癫痫越来越多地与免疫失调和炎症相关。T细胞受体(TCR)是适应性免疫的关键介质,在各种免疫介导的疾病中显示出库的改变。独特的TCR序列作为T细胞的分子条形码,克隆扩增伴随着总体TCR库多样性的降低反映了适应性免疫激活。我们研究了癫痫患者外周TCR库的变化及其与疾病严重程度和脑萎缩的关系。方法:研究了100例癫痫患者外周血单个核细胞的TCR α/β链谱,包括45例癫痫患者(14例控制良好的癫痫,22例耐药癫痫[DRE], 9例神经炎症相关性癫痫[NIE])和55例健康对照。NIE包括可能的自身免疫性或感染性神经炎症后新发癫痫。我们综合评估了克隆型分布、多样性、个体间共享和V/J基因使用情况。机器学习模型评估TCR曲目特征的诊断潜力。脑容量通过MRI测量,并与TCR曲目特征相关。结果:癫痫患者TCR多样性明显降低,尤其是DRE或NIE。他们还显示出V和J基因使用的独特模式,以及癫痫相关克隆型的个体间共享减少。结合V/J使用率和公共克隆型的机器学习模型将癫痫患者与对照组区分开来,平均分类准确率为0.80(95%偏差校正和加速bootstrap置信区间(BCa CI), 0.69-0.86),曲线下面积为0.80 (95% BCa CI, 0.70-0.87)。在无每日癫痫发作或无神经炎症临床证据的患者中,TCR多样性与癫痫发作频率相关。脑萎缩,特别是在丘脑和基底神经节,也与TCR库改变和特定的V/J基因使用模式有关。解释:外周TCR库分析显示癫痫中存在全身性免疫失调,并与神经变性相关。我们的研究结果强调了外周TCR库作为一种疾病相关的免疫特征,具有非侵入性询问癫痫状态和指导治疗干预的潜力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Systemic T Cell Receptor Profiling Reveals Adaptive Immune Activation and Potential Immune Signatures of Diagnosis and Brain Atrophy in Epilepsy.

Objective: Epilepsy is increasingly associated with immune dysregulation and inflammation. The T cell receptor (TCR), a key mediator of adaptive immunity, shows repertoire alterations in various immune-mediated diseases. The unique TCR sequence serves as a molecular barcode for T cells, and clonal expansion accompanied by reduced overall TCR repertoire diversity reflects adaptive immune activation. We investigated peripheral TCR repertoire changes in epilepsy and their association with disease severity and brain atrophy.

Methods: We profiled TCR α/β chain repertoires from peripheral blood mononuclear cells of 100 individuals, including 45 patients with epilepsy (14 with well-controlled epilepsy, 22 with drug-resistant epilepsy [DRE], and 9 with neuroinflammation-associated epilepsy [NIE]) and 55 unmatched healthy controls. NIE included new-onset epilepsy following possible autoimmune or infectious neuroinflammation. We comprehensively evaluated clonotype distribution, diversity, interindividual sharing, and V/J gene usage. Machine learning models evaluated the diagnostic potential of TCR repertoire features. Brain volumes were measured by MRI and correlated with TCR repertoire characteristics.

Results: Patients with epilepsy showed significantly reduced TCR diversity, particularly in DRE or NIE. They also showed distinct patterns of V and J gene usage and decreased interindividual sharing of epilepsy-associated clonotypes. Machine learning models incorporating V/J usage and public clonotypes distinguished patients with epilepsy from controls with a mean classification accuracy of 0.80 (95% bias-corrected and accelerated bootstrap confidence interval (BCa CI), 0.69-0.86) and the area under the curve of 0.80 (95% BCa CI, 0.70-0.87). TCR diversity correlated with seizure frequency among patients without daily seizures or clinical evidence of neuroinflammation. Brain atrophy, notably in the thalamus and basal ganglia, was also associated with TCR repertoire alterations and specific V/J gene usage patterns.

Interpretation: Peripheral TCR repertoire profiling reveals that systemic immune dysregulation is present in epilepsy and is associated with neurodegeneration. Our findings highlight the peripheral TCR repertoire as a disease-relevant immune signature with the potential to non-invasively interrogate epilepsy status and guide therapeutic interventions.

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来源期刊
Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology
Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology Medicine-Neurology (clinical)
CiteScore
9.10
自引率
1.90%
发文量
218
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology is a peer-reviewed journal for rapid dissemination of high-quality research related to all areas of neurology. The journal publishes original research and scholarly reviews focused on the mechanisms and treatments of diseases of the nervous system; high-impact topics in neurologic education; and other topics of interest to the clinical neuroscience community.
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