This is a preprint.
Rhinovirus as a Driver of Airway T-Cell Dynamics in Children with Severe Asthma
- PMID: 39605344
- PMCID: PMC11601360
- DOI: 10.1101/2024.11.15.623877
Rhinovirus as a Driver of Airway T-Cell Dynamics in Children with Severe Asthma
Update in
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Rhinovirus as a driver of airway T cell dynamics in children with treatment-refractory recurrent wheeze.JCI Insight. 2025 May 8;10(9):e189480. doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.189480. eCollection 2025 May 8. JCI Insight. 2025. PMID: 40337866 Free PMC article.
Abstract
Severe asthma in children is notoriously difficult to treat, and its immunopathogenesis is complex. In particular, the contribution of T cells and relationships to anti-viral immunity, remain enigmatic. Here, we coupled deep phenotyping with machine learning methods to resolve the dynamics of T cells in the diseased lower airways, and examined rhinovirus (RV) as a driver. Our strategy revealed a T-cell landscape dominated by type 1 and type 17 CD8+ signatures. Interrogation of phenotypic relationships coupled with trajectory mapping identified T-cell migratory and differentiation pathways spanning the blood and airways that culminated in tissue residency, and included transitions between type 1 and type 17 tissue-resident types. These T-cell dynamics were reflected in cytokine polyfunctionality in situ . Use of machine learning to cross-compare T-cell populations that were enriched in the airways of RV-positive children with those induced in the blood after RV challenge in an experimental infection model, precisely pinpointed RV-responsive signatures that mapped to T-cell differentiation pathways. Despite their rarity, these signatures were detected in the airways of uninfected children. Together, our results underscore the aberrant nature of type 1 immunity in the airways of children with severe asthma, and implicate an important viral trigger as a driver.
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