Objective: In multiple sclerosis (MS), central nervous system (CNS), cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), and blood display TCR clonal expansions of CD8(+) T cells. These clones have been assumed - but never demonstrated - to be similar in the three compartments. Addressing this key question is essential to infer the implication of peripheral clonally expanded CD8(+) T cells in the disease.
Methods: For the first time, TCR Vβ repertoire from paired blood (purified CD8(+) and CD4(+) T cells), CSF and CNS (22 lesions, various inflammatory and demyelination statuses) samples from three MS patients was studied using complementary determining region 3 (CDR3) spectratyping and high-throughput sequencing. In parallel, blood and CNS clonally expanded CD8(+) T cells were characterized by fluorescent staining.
Results: TCR Vβ repertoire analysis revealed strong sharing of predominant T-cell clones between CNS lesions, CSF, and blood CD8(+) T cells. In parallel, we showed that blood oligoclonal CD8(+) T cells exhibit characteristics of pathogenic cells, as they displayed a bias toward a memory phenotype in MS patients, with increased expression of CCR5, CD11a and Granzyme B (GZM-B) compared to non oligoclonal counterparts. CNS-infiltrating T cells were mainly CD8 expressing CD11a and GZM-B.
Interpretation: This study highlights the predominant implication of CD8(+) T cells in MS pathophysiology and demonstrates that potentially aggressive CD8(+) T cells can be easily identified and characterized from blood and CSF samples.