Author:
Tanno Hidetaka,Gould Timothy M.,McDaniel Jonathan R.,Cao Wenqiang,Tanno Yuri,Durrett Russell E.,Park Daechan,Cate Steven J.,Hildebrand William H.,Dekker Cornelia L.,Tian Lu,Weyand Cornelia M.,Georgiou George,Goronzy Jörg J.
Abstract
The T cell repertoire in each individual includes T cell receptors (TCRs) of enormous sequence diversity through the pairing of diverse TCR α- and β-chains, each generated by somatic recombination of paralogous gene segments. Whether the TCR repertoire contributes to susceptibility to infectious or autoimmune diseases in concert with disease-associated major histocompatibility complex (MHC) polymorphisms is unknown. Due to a lack in high-throughput technologies to sequence TCR α–β pairs, current studies on whether the TCR repertoire is shaped by host genetics have so far relied only on single-chain analysis. Using a high-throughput single T cell sequencing technology, we obtained the largest paired TCRαβ dataset so far, comprising 965,523 clonotypes from 15 healthy individuals including 6 monozygotic twin pairs. Public TCR α- and, to a lesser extent, TCR β-chain sequences were common in all individuals. In contrast, sharing of entirely identical TCRαβ amino acid sequences was very infrequent in unrelated individuals, but highly increased in twins, in particular in CD4 memory T cells. Based on nucleotide sequence identity, a subset of these shared clonotypes appeared to be the progeny of T cells that had been generated during fetal development and had persisted for more than 50 y. Additional shared TCRαβ in twins were encoded by different nucleotide sequences, implying that genetic determinants impose structural constraints on thymic selection that favor the selection of TCR α–β pairs with entire sequence identities.
Funder
HHS | National Institutes of Health
DOD | Defense Threat Reduction Agency
Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
44 articles.
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