Hepatic CD8+TOX+ T-cells are a hallmark of autoimmune hepatitis
Hepatic CD8+TOX+ T-cells are a hallmark of autoimmune hepatitis
Sherman, M. S.; Schafer, D. M.; Thomas, M. F.; Katzen, S. W.; Boland, G. M.; Shih, A. R.; Lauer, G. M.; Villani, A.-C.; Goessling, W.
AbstractAutoimmune hepatitis (AIH) is a chronic progressive liver disease that despite suggestive serum autoantibodies or plasma cell enrichment, remains functionally a diagnosis of exclusion. Whether the broader cellular composition of the liver might enable improved specificity of diagnosis has not been systematically tested. We prospectively recruited patients undergoing a clinically-indicated liver biopsy for suspected AIH and performed single-nucleus RNA sequencing (snRNA-seq) on biopsy tissue to map the cellular landscape of AIH and its diagnostic mimics. Unsupervised clustering on cell-type abundances alone largely separated AIH from non-AIH samples. Among individual populations, a subset of CD8 T-cells marked by high TOX and PD1 expression was the most discriminating feature: its enrichment perfectly distinguished AIH by both snRNA-seq and in situ density (AUC = 1.00), outperforming plasma cell abundance (AUC = 0.83). CD8TOX T-cell enrichment may therefore be the histologic lesion that marks the diagnosis of AIH.