Interstitial lung disease (ILD) is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in systemic sclerosis (SSc); however, the immunopathologic mechanisms driving lung disease in SSc are unclear. T cells have been implicated as a likely driver of lung injury in SSc. Here, we have evaluated T cells in the blood of patients with SSc-ILD and identified a specific population of cytotoxic CD8 T cells that is expanded in SSc-ILD patients. Cytotoxic effector memory CD8 T cells marked by CD57 expression are preferentially expanded in SSc-ILD patients compared to SSc patients without ILD and controls and show prominent clonal expansion. These CD57 + T effector memory (TEM) cells differ from T effector memory cells re-expressing CD45RA (TEMRA) transcriptomically and functionally, with cytotoxic function that is enhanced by CD155 engagement of the costimulatory receptor CD226. We performed immunostaining of lung tissue samples obtained from independent SSc-ILD patients (biopsy or explant) and confirmed the presence of CD57 + TEM. In parallel, we analyzed publicly available lung scRNA-seq datasets from multiple ILD cohorts and identified endothelial cells as a likely source of CD155 to activate CD57 + cytotoxic T cells. Together, the results implicate a CD57 + cytotoxic CD8 T cell population as a potential mediator of lung injury in SSc-ILD.
Sasaki et al. (Tue,) studied this question.