Robust detection of infectious disease, autoimmunity, and cancer from the paratope networks of adaptive immune receptors

Author:

Xu Zichang12,Ismanto Hendra S1234,Saputri Dianita S1234,Haruna Soichiro34,Sun Guanqun5ORCID,Wilamowski Jan34,Teraguchi Shunsuke346,Sengupta Ayan7,Li Songling1234,Standley Daron M1234ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Systems Immunology , Immunology Frontier Research Institute (IFReC), , 3-1 Yamadaoka, Suita 565-0871 , Japan

2. Osaka University , Immunology Frontier Research Institute (IFReC), , 3-1 Yamadaoka, Suita 565-0871 , Japan

3. Department of Genome Informatics , Research Institute for Microbial Diseases (RIMD), , 3-1 Yamadaoka, Suita 565-0871 , Japan

4. Osaka University , Research Institute for Microbial Diseases (RIMD), , 3-1 Yamadaoka, Suita 565-0871 , Japan

5. School of information Science , Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, 1-1 Asahidai, Nomi, Ishikawa 923-1292 , Japan

6. Faculty of Data Science , Shiga University 1-1-1 Banba, Hikone, Shiga 522-8522 , Japan

7. Cogent Labs , 3-2-1 Roppongi, Minato-ku, Tokyo 106-6122 , Japan

Abstract

Abstract Liquid biopsies based on peripheral blood offer a minimally invasive alternative to solid tissue biopsies for the detection of diseases, primarily cancers. However, such tests currently consider only the serum component of blood, overlooking a potentially rich source of biomarkers: adaptive immune receptors (AIRs) expressed on circulating B and T cells. Machine learning–based classifiers trained on AIRs have been reported to accurately identify not only cancers but also autoimmune and infectious diseases as well. However, when using the conventional “clonotype cluster” representation of AIRs, individuals within a disease or healthy cohort exhibit vastly different features, limiting the generalizability of these classifiers. This study aimed to address the challenge of classifying specific diseases from circulating B or T cells by developing a novel representation of AIRs based on similarity networks constructed from their antigen-binding regions (paratopes). Features based on this novel representation, paratope cluster occupancies (PCOs), significantly improved disease classification performance for infectious disease, autoimmune disease, and cancer. Under identical methodological conditions, classifiers trained on PCOs achieved a mean AUC of 0.893 when applied to new individuals, outperforming clonotype cluster–based classifiers (AUC 0.714) and the best-performing published classifier (AUC 0.777). Surprisingly, for cancer patients, we observed that “healthy-biased” AIRs were predicted to target known cancer-associated antigens at dramatically higher rates than healthy AIRs as a whole (Z scores >75), suggesting an overlooked reservoir of cancer-targeting immune cells that could be identified by PCOs.

Funder

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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