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NCT07680816

Metabolic and Functional Study of γδ T Cells in Critically Ill Patients

Sponsor: Union Hospital, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

This prospective observational cohort study investigates the subset-specific metabolic adaptation and functional remodeling of cytotoxic γδT cells in critically ill patients with and without sepsis. Emerging evidence indicates that γδT cells, as a bridge between innate and adaptive immunity, play a critical role in early anti-infection defense during sepsis. However, the functional status and underlying regulatory mechanisms of cytotoxic γδT cells in septic patients remain incompletely understood. Our preliminary single-cell transcriptomic analysis revealed that cytotoxic γδT cells from septic patients exhibit significant alterations in cytotoxicity-associated molecules (GZMB, PRF1, GNLY) and mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) pathway genes, particularly COX6C, which correlates with cytotoxic effector molecule expression. This study aims to systematically characterize the proportion, cytotoxicity, and mitochondrial metabolic function of circulating cytotoxic γδT cells across three cohorts: healthy controls, critically ill non-septic patients, and critically ill septic patients. By integrating flow cytometry, mitochondrial function assays, and functional validation experiments, we seek to elucidate the role of COX6C-mediated mitochondrial metabolic abnormalities in cytotoxic γδT cell dysfunction, providing theoretical basis for understanding immune dysregulation in sepsis and identifying novel therapeutic targets.

Official title: Subset-specific Metabolic Adaptation and Functional Remodeling of Gamma Delta T (γδ T) Cells in Critically Ill ICU Patients: A Single-center, Prospective, Observational Cohort Study.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 80 Years

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

105

Start Date

2026-07-15

Completion Date

2027-07-15

Last Updated

2026-07-02

Healthy Volunteers

Yes