Kain, Dylan, Awad, Wael, McElfresh, GW, Cansler, Meghan, Swarbrick, Gwendolyn M., Yew Poa, Kean Chan, McNeice, Conor, Boggy, Gregory, Rott, Katherine, Null, Megan D, Lewinsohn, David, Rossjohn, Jamie ![]() ![]() |
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Abstract
Neonatal sepsis is a leading cause of childhood mortality. Understanding immune cell development can inform strategies to combat this. MR1-restricted T (MR1T) cells can be defined by their recognition of small molecules derived from microbes, self, and drug and drug-like molecules, presented by the MHC class 1-related molecule (MR1). In healthy adults, the majority of MR1T cells express an invariant α-chain; TRAV1-2/TRAJ33/12/20 and are referred to as mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells. Neonatal MR1T cells isolated from cord blood (CB) demonstrate more diversity in MR1T TCR usage, with the majority of MR1-5-OP-RU-tetramer(+) cells being TRAV1-2(-). To better understand this diversity, we performed single-cell-RNA-seq/TCR-seq (scRNA-seq/scTCR-seq) on MR1-5-OP-RU-tetramer(+) cells from CB (n=5) and adult participants (n=5). CB-derived MR1T cells demonstrate a less cytotoxic/pro-inflammatory phenotype, and a more diverse TCR repertoire. A panel of CB and adult MAIT and TRAV1-2(-) MR1T cell clones were generated, and CB-derived clones were unable to recognize several common riboflavin-producing childhood pathogens (S. aureus, S. pneumoniae, M. tuberculosis). Biochemical and structural investigation of one CB MAIT TCR (CB964 A2; TRAV1-2/TRBV6-2) showed a reduction in binding affinity toward the canonical MR1-antigen, 5-OP-RU, compared to adult MAIT TCRs that correlated with differences in β-chain contribution in the TCR-MR1 interface. Overall, this data shows that CB MAIT and TRAV1-2(-) MR1T cells, express a diverse TCR repertoire, a more restricted childhood pathogen recognition profile and diminished cytotoxic and pro-inflammatory capacity. Understanding this diversity, along with the functional ability of TRAV1-2(-) MR1T cells, could provide insight into increased neonatal susceptibility to infections.
Item Type: | Website Content |
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Date Type: | Published Online |
Status: | In Press |
Schools: | Schools > Medicine Research Institutes & Centres > Systems Immunity Research Institute (SIURI) |
Publisher: | OpenRxiv |
Date of Acceptance: | 20 March 2025 |
Last Modified: | 04 Sep 2025 10:45 |
URI: | https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/180852 |
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