Key Points
Integrated transcriptome analyses identify putative precancerous circulating clonal CD4+ T-cell populations in patients with CTCL.
The study results reveal promising therapeutic strategies via targeting of CD82 and JAK kinases.
Abstract
The incidence of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL) increases with age, and blood involvement portends a worse prognosis. To advance our understanding of the development of CTCL and identify potential therapeutic targets, we performed integrative analyses of paired single-cell RNA and T-cell receptor (TCR) sequencing of peripheral blood CD4+ T cells from patients with CTCL to reveal disease-unifying features. The malignant CD4+ T cells of CTCL showed highly diverse transcriptomic profiles across patients, with most displaying a mature Th2 differentiation and T-cell exhaustion phenotype. TCR-CDR3 peptide prediction analysis suggested limited diversity between CTCL samples, consistent with a role for a common antigenic stimulus. Potential of heat diffusion for affinity-based trajectory embedding transition analysis identified putative precancerous circulating populations characterized by an intermediate stage of gene expression and mutation level between the normal CD4+ T cells and malignant CTCL cells. We further revealed the therapeutic potential of targeting CD82 and JAK that endow the malignant CTCL cells with survival and proliferation advantages.
Introduction
Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL) is a heterogeneous group of non-Hodgkin lymphomas.1 The most common form of CTCL exists on a spectrum of mycosis fungoides (MF) and Sézary syndrome (SS), characterized by malignant clones of skin-homing CD4+ T cells that may expand in the peripheral blood of patients with advanced disease and are indicative of a worse prognosis. The advanced forms of MF and SS CTCLs are more likely to show blood involvement and include patients with erythrodermic stage III disease, with a median survival rate of 4 to 6 years, and extracutaneous disease stage IVA (lymph nodes) or IVB (viscera), with a survival of <1.5 years.2 Analyses by comparative genomic hybridization3,4 and exome and whole-genome sequencing5-10 have revealed marked genetic heterogeneity across malignant cells of patients with CTCL, in particular within somatic copy number variations (SCNVs) relative to other cancers, but also within somatic single-nucleotide variations (SSNVs). Despite this mutational diversity, transcriptome profiling5,11-13 has shown that CTCL cells have high expression of several genes and their products, including TOX, TPO, PLS3, KIR3DL2, CCR4, and GATA3, 2 of which are targets of the current anti-CCR4 (mogamulizumab) and anti-KIR3DL2 (lacutamab) monoclonal antibody therapies. Somatic mutations in genes encoding T-cell receptors (TCRs) and JAK-STAT molecules have also been characterized in CTCL, including SSNVs of JAK1, JAK2, and JAK3, and SCNV amplifications of STAT3 and STAT5B, and aberrant JAK3/STAT signaling has been identified as a mechanism that promotes proliferation and survival of CTCL cells.7,14-16 However, ex vivo studies17,18 have revealed that JAK inhibition via nonspecific JAK targeting is variably effective at limiting CTCL survival, raising the question of whether more specific kinase inhibitors may be more effective.
Although the etiology and pathogenesis of CTCL have yet to be fully elucidated, a proposed19 progression includes a combination of chronic TCR stimulation and survival-enhancing mutations induced by inherited factors and/or environmental exposures of mature peripheral skin-homing CD4+ T cells. Examples include cutaneous or systemic chemical exposures20 and UV radiation,5,7 telomeric-shortening–associated chromosomal instability,21,22 SCNV selection, and accumulation of SSNV mutations that, in concert, drive the antiapoptotic, proliferative, chronic T-cell activating, and antitumor immune inhibiting behavior of CTCL cells. In fact, UV signature mutations have contributed to the mutational burden in 52% of patients with MF and 23% of patients with SS.23,24
Although these specific genetic and transcriptomic features of CTCL cells have been identified, the most widely used strategies for assessing malignant hematological involvement in patients with CTCL rely on immunophenotypic identification of CTCL cells as CD4+ CD26− and/or CD4+CD7− or by expansion of the TCRVβ family.25 However, these immunophenotypes may have substantial overlap with nonmalignant CD4+ T cells. Alternatively, mRNA sequencing of the completely rearranged TCRαβ heterodimer may be used as part of a multiomics approach to characterize more precisely the malignant T-cell clone relative to other CD4+ T cells while potentially identifying any other T-cell populations26,27 that may share the TCR clonotype with the bona fide CTCL cells. One such population may be precancerous or intermediate cells (ie, those that comprise a group of premalignant cells that are intermediate in the transition from normal to malignant cells and that are capable of increasing the risk of cancer development and subsequently may coexist with the malignant cells with the potential to influence tumor burden28,29).
In our study, we paired single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNAseq) with TCRαβ sequencing (scTCRseq) of CD4+ T cells from 11 patients with CTCL with documented blood involvement and 3 healthy volunteers, to better characterize malignant T cells compared with non-CTCL CD4+ cells within patients and with normal CD4+ T cells from healthy controls. By performing individual patient scRNAseq analysis along with the potential of heat diffusion for affinity-based trajectory embedding (PHATE) analysis30 in combination with scTCRseq and CTCL clonotyping, we constructed the trajectory of cells along with the transition from normal CD4+ T cells to bona fide CTCL cells and identified putative precancerous cells that were consistently intermediate in the expression of CTCL-defining genes and inferred mutation load. We extended these findings by exploring the therapeutic potential of a CTCL cell–overexpressing gene, CD82, which belongs to the tetraspanin family and has also been reported to promote the proliferation of acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) cells via STAT5A and AKT signaling.31-33 However, the role of CD82 in CTCL pathogenesis is unknown. In prior studies we found that patient-derived CTCL cells exhibit variable sensitivity to the JAK inhibitor ruxolitinib, and we now show that CTCL cells rendered CD82 deficient are specifically associated with phospho-JAK/STAT downregulation. Thus, our investigation also compared the relative potential of a spectrum of JAK inhibitors in treatment of CTCL. These integrated transcriptomic and trajectory analyses collectively provide fundamental insights into the development and progression of and potential therapeutics for CTCL.
Methods
Patient samples
Peripheral blood from patients with CTCL and healthy donors was collected in lithium heparin tubes at the Yale Cancer Center after obtaining written informed consent and following all regulations in accordance with the Yale Human Investigational Review Board. Procedures for isolation of various cell populations, cell culture, JAK inhibitor screening, and flow cytometry are described within the supplemental Methods.
scRNA library preparation and sequencing
Libraries were prepared by the Yale Center for Genome Analysis using single-cell library preparation kits from 10x Genomics. Single-cell library kits, RNA data processing, quality control, and analysis methods are presented in the supplemental Methods.
SSNV and SCNV analyses
CD82 knockout via CRISPR-Cas9
Purified malignant T cells from the peripheral blood of patients were cultured for 3 days, and CD82 gene knockout was performed according to the Integrated DNA Technologies protocol, as described in the supplemental Methods.
Results
Integrative analysis of paired mRNA single-cell transcriptome and TCR sequencing of CD4+ T cells from patients with CTCL reveals the heterogeneity of CTCLs
Purified CD4+ T cells from the peripheral blood of 11 patients with CTCL (Table 1) and 3 healthy individuals were analyzed by 5′ scRNAseq and paired scTCRseq (Figure 1A). We found that the dominant TCR clone in each patient with CTCL was substantially expanded, reflecting their CTCL identification by both scRNAseq data analysis and TCR clonal identity (Figure 1B). To identify common features among CTCL cells from disparate patients, we performed a Seurat integration analysis (Figure 1C). Unsupervised clustering of cells was represented by 2-dimensional Uniform Manifold Approximation and Projection, followed by the annotation of CTCL cells and normal CD4+ T cells of each patient based on the dominant CDR3 TCR sequence (Figure 1D). Integration revealed that normal CD4+ T cells from different patients coclustered, whereas the CTCL cells of individual patients each clustered separately, distinguished from each other and from the unified normal CD4+ T-cell cluster (Figure 1C).
Sample ID . | Age . | Sex . | ISCL stage . | B stage . | CTCL subtype . | Clinically abnormal phenotype . | % CD4+CD26− . | Abs. abn.∗ (/μL) . | Treatment . |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
P1 | 81 | M | IVA | B2 | SS | CD3dim+ CD4+ CD7− CD26− CD2+ CD8− CD10− CD5+ | 87.8 | 1818.3 | ECP, ACIT |
P2 | 76 | M | IIB | B1 | MF | CD3dim+ CD4+ CD7− CD26− CD8− CD5+ CD2+ | 37.4 | 1774.6 | ECP, BEX |
P3 | 72 | F | IVA | B2 | SS | CD3+ CD4+ CD7Var+ CD26− CD8− CD2+ CD25− | 82.6 | 2799.6 | ECP, BEX, IFN-α |
P4 | 79 | M | IA | B1 | MF | CD3dim+ CD4+ CD7− CD26− CD2+ | 61.2 | 964.5 | ECP, BEX |
P5 | 56 | M | IVA | B2 | SS | CD3+ CD4+ CD7+CD26− CD2dim+ CD8− CD5+ CD25− | 60.1 | 973.6 | ECP, BEX |
P6 | 85 | M | IVA | B2 | SS | CD3+ CD4+ CD7dim/− CD26− CD2Var+ CD8− CD5+ | 74.1 | 1387.2 | ECP, BEX |
P7 | 78 | F | IVA | B2 | SS | CD3+CD4+CD7−CD26−CD5+CD8− | 42.3 | 802.0 | ECP, BEX, VRS |
P8 | 74 | F | IVA | B2 | SS | CD3+ CD4+ CD7+CD26−CD8− | 89.0 | 979.0 | Moga |
P9 | 68 | F | IVA | B1 | SS | CD3dim+ CD4dim+CD7− CD26dim/− CD2dim+CD8− CD10− CD5dim+ CD25− | 51.9 | 356.2 | ECP, BEX, IFN-α, IFN-γ |
P10 | 70 | M | IIB | B1 | MF | CD3+ CD4+ CD7−/+ CD26− CD5dim+ | 44.8 | 503.9 | ECP, BEX |
P11 | 76 | M | IIB | B1 | MF | CD3dim+ CD4dim+ CD7− CD26− CD5+ | 58.0 | 580.0 | ECP, BEX, IFN-α |
Sample ID . | Age . | Sex . | ISCL stage . | B stage . | CTCL subtype . | Clinically abnormal phenotype . | % CD4+CD26− . | Abs. abn.∗ (/μL) . | Treatment . |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
P1 | 81 | M | IVA | B2 | SS | CD3dim+ CD4+ CD7− CD26− CD2+ CD8− CD10− CD5+ | 87.8 | 1818.3 | ECP, ACIT |
P2 | 76 | M | IIB | B1 | MF | CD3dim+ CD4+ CD7− CD26− CD8− CD5+ CD2+ | 37.4 | 1774.6 | ECP, BEX |
P3 | 72 | F | IVA | B2 | SS | CD3+ CD4+ CD7Var+ CD26− CD8− CD2+ CD25− | 82.6 | 2799.6 | ECP, BEX, IFN-α |
P4 | 79 | M | IA | B1 | MF | CD3dim+ CD4+ CD7− CD26− CD2+ | 61.2 | 964.5 | ECP, BEX |
P5 | 56 | M | IVA | B2 | SS | CD3+ CD4+ CD7+CD26− CD2dim+ CD8− CD5+ CD25− | 60.1 | 973.6 | ECP, BEX |
P6 | 85 | M | IVA | B2 | SS | CD3+ CD4+ CD7dim/− CD26− CD2Var+ CD8− CD5+ | 74.1 | 1387.2 | ECP, BEX |
P7 | 78 | F | IVA | B2 | SS | CD3+CD4+CD7−CD26−CD5+CD8− | 42.3 | 802.0 | ECP, BEX, VRS |
P8 | 74 | F | IVA | B2 | SS | CD3+ CD4+ CD7+CD26−CD8− | 89.0 | 979.0 | Moga |
P9 | 68 | F | IVA | B1 | SS | CD3dim+ CD4dim+CD7− CD26dim/− CD2dim+CD8− CD10− CD5dim+ CD25− | 51.9 | 356.2 | ECP, BEX, IFN-α, IFN-γ |
P10 | 70 | M | IIB | B1 | MF | CD3+ CD4+ CD7−/+ CD26− CD5dim+ | 44.8 | 503.9 | ECP, BEX |
P11 | 76 | M | IIB | B1 | MF | CD3dim+ CD4dim+ CD7− CD26− CD5+ | 58.0 | 580.0 | ECP, BEX, IFN-α |
ISCL stage and B stage are at diagnosis, and blood counts and treatments are at the time of sequencing.
Abs. abn., absolute numbers of abnormal cells; ACIT, acitretin; BEX, bexarotene; ECP, extracorporeal photopheresis; IFN-α, interferon-α; ISCL, International Society for Cutaneous Lymphomas; Lymph, lymphocytes; Moga, mogamulizumab; VRS, Vorinostat; WBC, white blood cell.
Abs. abn. = (% CD4+CD26− × % lymph.)/10 000 × WBC × 1000.
When we selectively included only annotated CTCL cells for clustering analysis, individual patients’ cells clustered distinctly. This is also demonstrated by a heat map that shows that each CTCL cluster has a distinguishing gene signature (supplemental Figure 1). Furthermore, annotation of CTCLs by T-helper (Th) cell subset hallmark genes (Th2-like: GATA3 >1, CCR4 >1; T-regulatory (Treg)–like: FOXP3 >1, CTLA4 >1; T-follicular helper (Tfh)–like: PDCD1 >1, CXCR5 > 1; and Th17-like: RORC >1, CCR6 >1) also revealed the diversity of CTCL cells among different patients, but with a Th2-like phenotype more than the Treg-, Tfh-, or Th17-like phenotype. In contrast, there was little to no Th1-like differentiation among the CTCL cells (Figure 1E). In 10 of the 11 CTCL patient samples, TCR clonotype profiling of the CTCL cluster in each patient showed a single dominant TCR clone (the exception being patient 6 [P6], where 2 TCRα and 2 TCRβ sequences were present within each CTCL cell), confirming that CTCLs are monoclonally expanded. Taken together, our data demonstrated wide transcriptomic and TCR clonotypic heterogeneity among patients with CTCL, albeit with features of a Th2 differentiation propensity.
PHATE analysis reveals putative precancerous intermediate CD4+ T-cell populations in patients with CTCL
CTCL is believed to be derived from mature effector T cells with increased age-associated risk, suggesting that an accumulation of genetic mutations may play an important role in CTCL development. Given that TCR clonality is a fundamental feature of CTCL, TCR clonal status may provide insight into the history of CTCL developmental. With this understanding, we hypothesized that a group of genotypically and transcriptionally transitory circulating CD4+ T cells (ie, intermediate in transitioning from normal CD4+ T cells to malignant CTCL cells) may be present in patients with CTCL. To test our hypothesis, we performed scRNAseq analysis and CTCL scTCRseq clonal annotation for each patient separately. We consistently observed that total CD4+ T cells produced 2 general clusters clearly delineated as CTCLs vs normal CD4+ T cells, (Figure 2A; supplemental Figure 2). However, TCR clonotype annotation (Figure 2B) consistently revealed in each patient an expanded population of normal-clustering CD4+ T cells that shared the identical TCR clonotype with the malignant CTCL cells. When we subclustered the normal T cells, those normal T cells expressing the CTCL TCR clonotype were contained within a new cluster (Figure 2C-D; supplemental Figure 2). When we compared the CTCL clonotype frequency to all-clonotype mean frequency in both the total normal CD4+ T-cell cluster and the CTCL clonotype–containing subcluster, we found that the CTCL clonotype frequency was significantly higher, indicating a previous level of clonal expansion in the CTCL clonotype-positive, yet normal clustering, CD4+ T cells (Figure 2E-F).
We next used PHATE analysis, which enables the visualization of high-dimensional data with cell trajectory structure to predict the developmental direction of different cell clusters,30 and found that the cluster of normal T cells containing the CTCL clonotype was consistently situated between the main population of normal T cells (that is, those without the dominant CTCL-clonotype) and the main CTCL cluster (Figure 2G-H; supplemental Figure 3). This finding further suggests that a putative transitional population exists between normal CD4+ T cells and established CTCL cells (Figure 2E-F; supplemental Figure 3). Transferring the group identity of cells from the single-patient analysis to a CTCL patient-integrated object also revealed the 3 groups: CTCLs, normal CD4+ T cells, and intermediate transitional CD4+ T cells (Figure 3A; top). When differential expression genes (DEGs) were assessed within this integrated dataset, in all cases the transitional CD4+ T cells had expression that was intermediate between that of normal CD4+ T cells and malignant CTCL cells (Figure 3, bottom; supplemental Figure 4). We also performed analyses to detect SSNVs34 and SCNVs35 inferred from the scRNAseq data (Figure 3B-E). Once again, our putative transitional CD4+ populations suggested a premalignant state with mutation levels intermediate between normal CD4+ T cells and the CTCL cells, notably with mutational diversity that was limited to a smaller subset of that found within each CTCL population’s SSNVs (Figure 3B). Similarly, a subset of CTCL SCNVs was shared with the transitional CD4+ population (Figure 3E). Projection of SCNV level onto the PHATE map revealed a progressive increase from normal CD4+ T cells, to transitional cells, to CTCL cells (Figure 3F-G). These findings collectively reveal that, in each patient, there was an expanded clone of T cells, TCR matched to each malignant CTCL cell population, with intermediate levels of expression of CTCL-defining genes, including those indicative of Th2 differentiation status (supplemental Figure 5), as well as mutational loads, suggesting that such intermediate cells represent precancerous populations involved in development of CTCL.
Integrative analysis identifies common DEGs and fundamental pathways among heterogenous CTCL patient samples
Despite the heterogeneity among CTCL patient samples, we looked for common features of CTCL by integrative analysis. DEG analysis was performed to compare all CTCL cells to total normal CD4+ T cells from patients and to all CD4+ T cells from healthy controls. Plotting the Uniform Manifold Approximation and Projection and heat map (Figure 4A) revealed 66 upregulated genes and 13 downregulated genes within CTCL cells compared with both normal CD4+ T-cell populations. Pathway and enrichment analysis by Enrichr36,37 (https://maayanlab.cloud/Enrichr/) using The Molecular Signatures Pathway Database (MsigDB_Hallmark_2020) identified 18 significantly (adjusted P ≤ .05) enriched pathways (supplemental Table 1). Several signaling pathways involved in T-cell activation and downstream of TCR signaling (eg, allograft rejection, reactive oxygen species, tumor necrosis factor, hypoxia, and mTORC-1) were notably enriched in CTCL cells relative to normal CD4+ T cells (Figure 4B). Despite the fact that our analyses integrated scRNAseq and scTCRseq data, the enrichment pathways of DEGs from previously published bulk RNAseq38 largely overlapped our scRNA DEGs. Taken together, our identified enriched signaling pathways suggests that both TCR engagement and cytokine-induced JAK/STAT signaling are critically involved in the persistence and proliferation of CTCL cells in patients. In addition to the increase in several memory/activation markers (SELL, CCR7, ITGBB1, BRD2, TNFRSF25, REL, TSPAN2, TNFRSF4, and NR4A2) in CTCL, the DEG profile also revealed that exhausted immune marker genes (TOX, TIGIT, CTLA4, PDCD1, and LAG3) were significantly increased in CTCL cells, suggesting the possible influence of chronic antigen stimulation in patients with CTCL (Figure 4C).
In further considering the features of TCR activation and T-cell exhaustion that may affect the antiapoptotic and proliferative behavior of CTCL cells, we established an in vitro culture system to assess the relevance of TCR engagement by using anti-CD3/anti-CD28 stimulation, with and without resting the cells before stimulation, given that prior studies have shown that exhausted T cells proliferate again after withdrawal of chronic antigen stimulation.39,40 We postulated that adding a resting period for patient-derived CTCL cells before TCR restimulation would promote their proliferation ex vivo. Indeed, CTCL cells minimally proliferated without TCR engagement, yet did so much more readily under conditions of a 4-day period of rest before TCR activation (Figure 4D-E; supplemental Figures 6 and 7), suggesting that malignant CTCL cells have the capacity to proliferate in a TCR-dependent manner. We also confirmed, in the CTCL cells of our samples, the upregulation of previously identified CCR4 and KIR3DL2 (Figure 4C), both of which are current therapeutic targets.41-43 In addition, we found that expression of CD82, another gene encoding a cell surface protein, was significantly upregulated, suggesting its potential as a novel therapeutic target. DEG analysis was also performed to compare CTCLs from 2 different diagnosis categories, MF and SS, the latter of which carries a worse prognosis.44 We found that 7 genes were upregulated, whereas 28 genes were downregulated in SS relative to MF, suggesting that these are potential biomarkers for diagnosis and prognosis and requiring further investigation (supplemental Figure 8).
CD82 regulates CTCL proliferation and apoptosis through the JAK/STAT and AKT/PI3K pathways
We further characterized our newly identified CTCL DEG CD82 in scRNAseq data and found that this surface protein, like CCR4 and KIR3DL2, is intermediately expressed in the putative transitional CD4+ T-cell population, and at a much lower level in normal CD4+ T cells (Figure 5A). Furthermore, flow cytometry confirmed that the level of cell surface CD82 protein expression by CTCL cells was significantly higher than in normal CD4+ T cells from the same patients (Figure 5B; supplemental Figure 9). To understand the function of CD82 in CTCL cells, we used CRISPR-Cas9 to knock out the CD82 gene in isolated patient CTCL cells, confirming the deletion at both the protein and mRNA levels (Figure 5C-D; supplemental Figure 10). We found that CD82 deficiency markedly reduced the proliferative capacity of the activated CTCL cells (Figure 5E-F) and that apoptotic cells largely increased within the CD82-knockout CTCL cultures (Figure 5G). Taken together, features of CD82 expression, along with their relevance to CTCL cell proliferation and survival, suggest a therapeutic targeting strategy that could facilitate the elimination of CD82-expressing circulating T cells and/or blocking CD82-dependent CTCL-cell proliferation and increasing apoptosis. Notably, other studies have shown that CD82 promotes the survival of AML cells through JAK/STAT and ATK/PI3K pathways.32,45 Through phosphoprotein analysis of CD82 signaling pathway components via flow cytometry, we found reduced activation of JAK, STAT, and AKT in CD82-deficient CTCL cells, suggesting that CD82 also drives proliferation of CTCL cells via JAK/STAT and AKT signaling pathways (Figure 5H).
Our current enrichment analysis (Figure 4B) highlighted JAK/STAT activation pathways in CTCL cells, and our recent research helped elucidate the potential therapeutic role of the JAK-inhibitor ruxolitinib.17 Although these data suggest that targeting JAK signaling has a potential role in the treatment of CTCL, we considered whether other JAK inhibitors would show enhanced activity across patients. Thus, we performed dose-response assays against a panel of agents exhibiting different JAK family member selectivity profiles, to identify their relative potential in the treatment of CTCL (Figure 5I). Of 13 assessed agents, pacritinib, fedratinib, and entrectinib displayed the greatest potency, with all patient samples showing a 50% inhibitory concentration of <10 μM.
Discussion
Unlike other hematopoietic malignancies that may have signature gene fusions or limited gene copy number alterations, the genetic landscape of CTCL is notably diffuse. The extensive variability of SCNVs and SSNVs that are present within CTCL cells challenges our understanding of CTCL etiology and pathogenesis in the development of therapeutics. Previously, we and others have used bulk genetic and expression analyses to address these challenges. More recently, Herrera et al12 and Borcherding et al11 combined RNAseq with TCRseq and showed the heterogeneity of CTCL cells, which reflects differential disease development stages, treatment sensitivities, and tissue microenvironment localization. By also using an integrative analysis combining scRNAseq and scTCRseq with PHATE analysis, we were able to provide novel insights into the development and progression of CTCL and to identify promising therapeutic strategies.
The propensity for a Th2 phenotype, known to drive symptomatic features of CTCL, or a Treg phenotype among CTCL cells is also a likely contributor to the decreased cellular immunity in patients with CTCL that is evidenced by an increased risk of herpes zoster and secondary malignancies.15,46 Specific cytokines play critical roles in the pathogenesis of Th2-like CTCL cells. Interleukin-4 (IL-4) induces the differentiation of naive Th to the Th2 phenotype, which subsequently produces additional IL-4 in a positive feedback loop. In addition, Th2 effector cytokines IL-5, IL-13, and IL-31 are overexpressed in CTCL cells.47-49 IL-5 is responsible for the maturation and activation of eosinophils and, together with IL-13, promotes allergic inflammation, whereas IL-31 is directly linked to pruritus in patients with CTCL.
Unlike bulk RNAseq, which usually requires sorting of CTCL cells based on loss of T-cell markers such as CD7 and CD26, which are not always consistent, our parallel scRNAseq and scTCRseq sequencing accurately identified malignant cells via the annotation of the dominant monoclonal TCR sequence onto the subgroup of cells generated by unbiased clustering. The PHATE algorithm further generated cell trajectories that reflected the developmental direction between different clusters. At single-cell resolution, our integrative analysis combined with PHATE consistently identified a transitional group of cells with a developmental stage between normal T cells and established malignant CTCL cells, which would not have been possible by bulk RNAseq. Our subsequent mutational analysis further supports a pathoetiology of CTCL that involves a progressive increase in mutation acquisition from normal T cells, to intermediate precancerous T cells, to the eventual emergence of bona fide malignant CTCL cells.
By comparing genetic mutations between the latter 2 groups, we further narrowed down a proportion of CTCL-unique mutations that may play pivotal roles in driving malignant transformation. In addition, given that the transcriptional and mutational profiles of the putative premalignant populations are intermediate between normal and malignant CD4 T cells, it is highly possible that there is a common genetic trajectory across different patients. Distinguishing such would require an additional genomic component to a future multiomics analysis of CTCL cells. Nonetheless, we used the program CellSNP34 to determine the top 10 mutated genes (SSNVs in DNM3, CCDC47, AC016831.7, RPTOR, TOX, SMYD3, SKAP1, TSHZ2, HCG27, MUC20-OT1) in our CTCL intermediate cells that were commonly shared (50% or greater) among our patient samples (supplemental Table 2). If such intermediate cells play a role in the development, maintenance, and/or transition into CTCL cells, tracking them before and after treatment may show whether their continued presence (or elimination) is associated with durability of response and disease recurrence.
That CTCL cells also show features of chronic activation and exhaustion led us to consider whether chronic antigen exposure is ongoing within patients with CTCL and whether it influences survival and proliferative advantages over acquired mutations. Indeed, despite the identification of SSNVs and SCNVs in cell cycle regulating tumor suppressor genes, such as TP53 and CDKN2A, and T-cell activating genes, such as STAT3 and STAT5B, CTCL cells are notoriously limited in their capacity to grow ex vivo. Again, this limitation is suggestive of a continued reliance on cognate antigen stimulation. The potential for dependence of CTCL on chronic antigen stimulation has also been supported by the clustering of CTCL around Langerhans cells in Pautrier’s microabscesses1 and around dendritic cells in ex vivo culture systems.50 Thus, future improved screening and accurate identification of CTCL TCR specificity may provide additional insight into development of CTCL.
Postthymically, T-cell cycling is normally regulated, first by the differentiation of naive T cells into effector and memory T cells after initial exposure to cognate antigenic peptides along with costimulatory signals (eg, via CD28). Second, repetitive antigen exposures thereafter may further drive effector/memory T-cell clonal expansion, whereas chronic exposure may trigger an exhaustive state characterized by unresponsiveness to antigen stimulation and increased expression of coinhibitory molecules. CTCL cells show features of both a chronic activation and chronic exhaustion state that may lead to perpetuation of low-level proliferation of CTCL precursor cells. How and when such cells acquire mutations is akin to similar questions for other premalignant states, including in epithelial malignancies (eg, cervical intraepithelial neoplasia/cervical cancer, and actinic keratosis/skin) and hemopoietic cancers (eg, myelodysplastic syndrome/AML and circulating monoclonal B-cell lymphoproliferative states/B-cell leukemias in the bone marrow and blood).
Analysis of DEGs revealed TCR-induced T-cell activation and exhaustion markers in CTCLs, and we demonstrated that the induction of optimized CTCL cell proliferation requires short-term rest to recover from the exhaustive state, followed by TCR stimulation, which suggests a possible in vivo CTCL dynamic. The skin or skin-draining lymphoid organs may provide an antigen-dependent CTCL stimulatory microenvironment to continuously drive their proliferation. Although chronic antigen presentation may shift activated CTCL cells to a more exhausted state, we postulate that this can be reversed by egressing into blood circulation where the absence of antigen provides a resting condition for the CTCL cells, until they migrate back to the skin and/or lymph nodes for another round of stimulation and proliferation.
Our biomics analysis also suggested 2 novel therapeutic strategies for CTCL. We identified the overexpressed cell surface marker CD82 and showed that CD82 knockout reduced CTCL cell proliferation and increased apoptosis. In addition, reduced activation of downstream JAK, STAT, and AKT were seen in CD82-deficient CTCL cells. Given that CD82 expression is not limited to CTCL cells,51,52 emerging strategies (eg, bispecific antibodies and/or prodrug-enzyme–paired agents) would be necessary to therapeutically target this surface protein. Our investigation of the effect of specific JAK family member inhibition on patient-derived CTCL cell viability suggests certain JAK inhibitors may more effectively target CTCL cells across patients, but clinical studies are necessary to fully elucidate the safety and efficacy of such JAK inhibitors in the treatment of patients with CTCL.
Acknowledgments
This work was supported by the R. S. Evans Foundation and the Cutaneous Lymphoma Foundation.
Authorship
Contribution: J.R., J.M.L., X.L., A.L.O.K., F.N.M., S.X., and M.G. designed the experiments; M.G., F.M.F., and K.R.C. obtained informed consent and samples from the patients; J.R., A.L.O.K., F.N.M., and S.X. performed the experiments; J.R., R.Q., N.-T.R., B.K.R., B.E., S.G., G.W., A.L.O.K., F.N.M., and S.X. analyzed the data; J.R., R.Q., N.-T.R., J.M.L., A.L.O.K., F.N.M., S.X., Y.H., W.D., Y.K., S.K., and M.G. participated in discussions of the data; J.R., R.Q., N.-T.R., J.M.L., and M.G. wrote the manuscript; and all authors reviewed and edited the manuscript.
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Correspondence: Michael Girardi, Department of Dermatology, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar St, PO Box 208059, New Haven, CT 06520; e-mail: [email protected].
References
Author notes
The scRNAseq data reported in this article have been deposited in the Gene Expression Omnibus database (accession number GSE197619).
All scripts for bioinformatic analysis are available upon request from the corresponding author, Michael Girardi ([email protected]).
The full-text version of this article contains a data supplement.
J.R., R.Q., and N.-T.R. contributed equally to this study.