The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of thymic dysplasia on the phenotypic and functional characteristics of T cells in patients with 22q11.2 deletion syndrome, including T-cell phenotype, transcriptional profile, cytokine production, as well as the possibility of utilizing IL-7 to recover their numbers and function. We found a strong bias towards Th1 response in pediatric and young adult 22q11.2DS patients, expansion of CXCR5(+) follicular helper cells and CXCR3(+)CCR6(-) Th1 cells, increased production of cytokines IFN- γ, IL-10, IL-2, IL-21 and TNF-α.
This Th1 skew was primarily driven by expanded terminally differentiated T cells. IL-7 further reduced naive T cells, increased cytokine production and caused an upregulation of exhaustion markers.
Thus, Th1 bias in T cell populations persists from infancy into adolescence and is accompanied by accelerated maturation of T cells into memory stages. This phenotype is exacerbated by IL-7 which causes further decrease in naïve T cells in vitro.