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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Exhaustive T-cell repertoire sequencing of human peripheral blood samples reveals signatures of antigen selection and a directly measured repertoire size of at least 1 million clonotypes

TLDR
It is shown that the sensitivity of sequence-based repertoire profiling is limited by both sequencing depth and sequencing accuracy, and a new, directly measured, lower limit on individual T-cell repertoire size is established.
Abstract
Massively parallel sequencing is a useful approach for characterizing T-cell receptor diversity. However, immune receptors are extraordinarily difficult sequencing targets because any given receptor variant may be present in very low abundance and may differ legitimately by only a single nucleotide. We show that the sensitivity of sequence-based repertoire profiling is limited by both sequencing depth and sequencing accuracy. At two timepoints, 1 wk apart, we isolated bulk PBMC plus naive (CD45RA+/CD45RO-) and memory (CD45RA-/CD45RO+) T-cell subsets from a healthy donor. From T-cell receptor beta chain (TCRB) mRNA we constructed and sequenced multiple libraries to obtain a total of 1.7 billion paired sequence reads. The sequencing error rate was determined empirically and used to inform a high stringency data filtering procedure. The error filtered data yielded 1,061,522 distinct TCRB nucleotide sequences from this subject which establishes a new, directly measured, lower limit on individual T-cell repertoire size and provides a useful reference set of sequences for repertoire analysis. TCRB nucleotide sequences obtained from two additional donors were compared to those from the first donor and revealed limited sharing (up to 1.1%) of nucleotide sequences among donors, but substantially higher sharing (up to 14.2%) of inferred amino acid sequences. For each donor, shared amino acid sequences were encoded by a much larger diversity of nucleotide sequences than were unshared amino acid sequences. We also observed a highly statistically significant association between numbers of shared sequences and shared HLA class I alleles.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Genomics-based immuno-oncology: bridging the gap between immunology and tumor biology

TL;DR: The discussion will be centered around the genetic foundations governing tumor immunity and molecular determinants associated with clinical benefit from ICI therapy, and the importance of molecular diversity as a driver of anti-tumor immunity and how these factors can be probed using genomic studies.
Posted ContentDOI

How heterogeneous thymic output and homeostatic proliferation shape naive T cell receptor clone abundance distributions

TL;DR: It is found that heterogeneity in proliferation rates, and not in thymic output rates, is the main determinant in generating the observed clone counts, consistent with proliferation-driven maintenance of the T cell population in humans.
Book ChapterDOI

Sampling from T Cell Receptor Repertoires

TL;DR: This work considers the distribution of the number of repeats of any TCR in a sample, the mean number of cells needed to find a repeat with probability one half, and the relationship between the true distribution of clonal sizes and that experimentally observed in a samples.

Interrogating the TCR-pMHC complex in health and disease using immunogenomics methods

TL;DR: ........................................................................................................................ iii Lay Summary ................................................................................................................
Journal ArticleDOI

Immunophenotypic characterization of CD45RO+ and CD45RA+ T cell subsets in peripheral blood of peripheral T cell lymphoma patients.

TL;DR: The immunophenotypic profile from this study will help to develop the differential diagnosis and treatment of PTCL patients in the future, and improve the accuracy rate of diagnosis and to ameliorate the prognosis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Clustal W and Clustal X version 2.0

TL;DR: The Clustal W and ClUSTal X multiple sequence alignment programs have been completely rewritten in C++ to facilitate the further development of the alignment algorithms in the future and has allowed proper porting of the programs to the latest versions of Linux, Macintosh and Windows operating systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Base-calling of automated sequencer traces using Phred. I. accuracy assessment

TL;DR: In this article, a base-calling program for automated sequencer traces, phred, with improved accuracy was proposed. But it was not shown to achieve a lower error rate than the ABI software, averaging 40%-50% fewer errors in the data sets examined independent of position in read, machine running conditions, or sequencing chemistry.
Journal ArticleDOI

Base-Calling of Automated Sequencer Traces Using Phred. II. Error Probabilities

TL;DR: The ability to estimate a probability of error for each base-call, as a function of certain parameters computed from the trace data, is developed and implemented in the base-calling program.
Journal ArticleDOI

T-cell antigen receptor genes and T-cell recognition.

TL;DR: This view of T-cell recognition has implications for how the receptors might be selected in the thymus and how they (and immunoglobulins) may have arisen during evolution.
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