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Summary from Dryad:

"Abstract:
T cells are the central drivers of many inflammatory diseases, but the repertoire of tissue-resident T cells at sites of pathology in human organs remains poorly understood. We examined the site-specificity of T cell receptor (TCR) repertoires across tissues (5-18 tissues per patient) in prospectively collected autopsies of patients with and without graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), a potentially lethal tissue-targeting complication of allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation, as well as in mouse models of GVHD. Anatomic similarity between tissues was a key determinant of TCR repertoire composition within patients, independent of disease or transplant status. The T cells recovered from peripheral blood and spleen in patients and mice captured a limited portion of the TCR repertoire detected in tissues. Whereas few T cell clones were shared across patients, motif-based clustering revealed shared repertoire signatures across patients in a tissue-specific fashion. T cells at disease sites had a tissue-resident phenotype and were of donor origin based on single-cell chimerism analysis. These data demonstrate the complex composition of T cell populations that persist in human tissues at the end-stage of an inflammatory disorder following lymphocyte-directed therapy. These findings also underscore the importance of studying T cells in tissues rather than blood for tissue-based pathologies and suggest the tissue-specific nature of both the endogenous and post-transplant T cell landscape.

Usage notes:
Data here are aggregated from the Adaptive Biotech data found here: https://doi.org/10.21417/SD2022GVHD"

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