CD70 identifies alloreactive T cells and represents a potential target for prevention and treatment of acute GvHD

Kriti Verma,Wayne Croft,Sandra Margielewska-Davies,Hayden Pearce, Christine Stephens, Diana Diaconescu, Sarah Bevington,Charles Craddock, Rasoul Amel-Kashipaz,Jianmin Zuo, Francesca AM Kinsella,Paul Moss

Blood Advances(2024)

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Abstract
Graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) remains a major challenge following allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT) and further understanding of its immunopathology is crucial for developing new treatments. CD70 interacts with CD27 and is upregulated transiently on T cells following recent TCR engagement. Here we investigated the functional and clinical significance of CD70 expression on T cells during the early post-transplantation period. CD70 was expressed on a subset of highly activated memory T cells within the first 2 weeks post-transplant which then gradually declined in most patients. CD70+ T cells exhibited an open chromatin landscape and a transcriptional profile indicative of intense MYC-driven glycolysis and proliferation. CD4+ and CD8+ CD70+ T cell number increased by 9-fold and 4-fold respectively during acute GvHD (aGvHD) and displayed an oligoclonal TCR repertoire. These cells expressed CCR4 and CCR6 chemokine receptors and were markedly increased in aGvHD tissue samples. Furthermore, CD70+ T cells demonstrated alloreactive specificity in vitro and proliferative and inflammatory cytokine responses were markedly attenuated by CD70 blockade. These findings identify CD70 as a marker of highly activated alloreactive T cells and reveal the potential therapeutic importance of inhibiting CD27-CD70 co-stimulation in both the prophylaxis and treatment of aGvHD.
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