In the peripheral blood, it has been shown that smoking is, to date, the only specific condition leading to an increase in GPR15+ T cells. We, therefore, aimed to characterize GPR15-expressing blood T cells in more detail. The whole transcriptome by RNAseq as a proxy for protein expression was analyzed in GPR15+ and GPR15- T cells. A deep immuno-phenotyping was conducted for the identification of T cell subtypes. The expression of GPR15 seemed to be unique, not concomitantly accompanied with the expression of another protein. According to different T cell subtypes, there is no single cell type prominently represented in GPR15+ T cells. The individually different proportions of GPR15+ cells among each GPR15-expressing T cell subtypes in blood were strongly associated with chronic smoking. Indeed, the frequency of GPR15+ T cell subtypes can be effectively used as a highly convincing biomarker for tobacco smoking. While the chronic smoking-induced enrichment of GPR15+ T cells in blood might indicate a systemic inflammation, by the widespread presence in different T cell subtypes, GPR15 could feature a general impact on maintaining the systemic homeostasis to putatively prevent harm from smoking.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1354750X.2018.1539769 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!