Myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME) is a severe, debilitating disease, with substantial evidence pointing to immune dysregulation as a key contributor to pathophysiology. To characterize the gene regulatory state underlying T cell dysregulation in ME, we performed multiomic analysis across T cell subsets by integrating single-cell RNA-seq, RNA-seq, and ATAC-seq and further analyzed CD8+ T cell subpopulations following symptom provocation. Specific subsets of CD8+ T cells, as well as certain innate T cells, displayed the most pronounced dysregulation in ME. We observed upregulation of key transcription factors associated with T cell exhaustion in CD8+ T cell effector memory subsets, as well as an altered chromatin landscape and metabolic reprogramming consistent with an exhausted immune cell state. To validate these observations, we analyzed expression of exhaustion markers using flow cytometry, detecting a higher frequency of exhaustion-associated factors. Together, these data identify T cell exhaustion as a component of ME, a finding which may provide a basis for future therapies, such as checkpoint blockade, metabolic interventions, or drugs that target chronic viral infections.
Keywords: ATACseq; ME/CFS; T cell exhaustion; flow cytometry; single-cell RNAseq.