Therapeutic blockade of co-inhibitory immune receptors PD-1 and CTLA-4 has revolutionized oncology, but treatments are limited by immune-related adverse events (IRAEs). IRAE Colitis (irColitis) is the most common, severe IRAE affecting up to 25% of patients on dual PD-1 and CTLA-4 inhibition. Here, we present a systems biology approach to define the cell populations and transcriptional programs driving irColitis. We collected paired colon mucosal biopsy and blood specimens from 13 patients with irColitis, 8 healthy individuals, and 8 controls on immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), and analyzed them with single-cell/nuclei RNA sequencing with paired TCR and BCR sequencing, multispectral fluorescence microscopy, and secreted factor analysis (Luminex). We profiled 299,407 cells from tissue and blood and identified 105 cell subsets that revealed significant tissue remodeling in active disease. Colon mucosal immune populations were dominated by tissue-resident memory (Trm) ITGAE-expressing CD8 T cells representing a phenotypic spectrum defined by gene programs associated with T cell activation, cytotoxicity, cycling, and exhaustion. CD8 Trm and effector CD4 T cells upregulated type 17 immune programs (IL17A, IL26) and Tfh-like programs (CXCL13, PDCD1). We also identified for the first time an increased abundance of two KLRG1 and ITGB2-expressing CD8 T cell populations with circulatory cell markers, including a GZMK Trm-like population and a CX3CR1 population that is predicted to be intravascular. These two populations were more abundant in irColitis patients treated with dual PD-1/CTLA-4 inhibition than those receiving anti-PD-1 monotherapy. They also had significant TCR sharing with PBMCs, suggesting a circulatory origin. In irColitis we observed significant epithelial turnover marked by fewer LGR5-expressing stem cells, more transit amplifying cells, and upregulation of apoptotic and DNA-sensing programs such as the cGAS-STING pathway. Mature epithelial cells with top crypt genes upregulated interferon-stimulated pathways, CD274 (PD-L1), anti-microbial genes, and MHC-class II genes, and downregulated aquaporin and solute-carrier gene families, likely contributing to epithelial cell damage and absorptive dysfunction. Mesenchymal remodeling was defined by increased endothelial cells, both in irColitis patients and specifically in patients on dual PD-1/CTLA-4 blockade. Cell-cell communication analysis identified putative receptor-ligand pairs that recruit CD8 T cells from blood to inflamed endothelium and positive feedback loops such as the CXCR3 chemokine system that retain cells in tissue. This study highlights the cellular and molecular drivers underlying irColitis and provides new insights into the role of CTLA-4 and PD-1 signaling in maintaining CD8 Trm homeostasis, regulating CD8 T recruitment from blood, and promoting epithelial-immune crosstalk critical to gastrointestinal immune tolerance and intestinal barrier function.
2507 Background: Myocarditis due to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) is uncommon; however, myocarditis due to ICIs leads to severe morbidity and even death in 20-40% of cases. The molecular underpinnings of ICI-associated myocarditis are poorly understood, and there is an unmet clinical need to identify therapeutic targets and biomarkers that can aid in disease management. Methods: Heart tissue was obtained through endomyocardial biopsy or autopsy of patients receiving ICIs and was profiled with paired single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) and T cell receptor sequencing (TCR) using the 10x Genomics Chromium system. A control dataset was constructed using scRNAseq data of heart tissue from patients receiving ICIs but without myocarditis and a published dataset from healthy patients not receiving ICIs. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were collected at the time of myocarditis diagnosis in a larger cohort of patients and analyzed with ICI-treated controls. The CITE-Seq protocol was used to measure paired scRNA-seq, TCR, and surface proteomics in PBMCs, using serial timepoints where available. Results: Heart tissue from 13 patients with myocarditis, including three fatal cases, and seven controls yielded 77,712 single cells. Blood profiling from 27 patients with ICI myocarditis and ICI-treated controls across 54 samples yielded over 230,000 cells. ICI myocarditis tissue demonstrated an increased T cell infiltrate (OR 8.94, FDR = 0.0021). Expression of multiple inflammatory pathways, most notably interferon responses, was up-regulated across multiple immune and non-immune cell types in the setting of myocarditis, providing important pathophysiological insights. T cell clones were also found to be shared between blood and heart, enabling the identification of putative pathogenic T cell subsets. Conclusions: Increased intramyocardial T cells and the activation of interferon response gene networks were seen in the setting of ICI myocarditis. These preliminary findings highlight potential pathological pathways in ICI myocarditis that could serve as biomarkers or therapeutic targets.
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