| Literature DB >> 28514665 |
Victor Greiff1, Ulrike Menzel1, Enkelejda Miho1, Cédric Weber1, René Riedel2, Skylar Cook1, Atijeh Valai3, Telma Lopes1, Andreas Radbruch2, Thomas H Winkler4, Sai T Reddy5.
Abstract
Antibody repertoire diversity and plasticity is crucial for broad protective immunity. Repertoires change in size and diversity across multiple B cell developmental stages and in response to antigen exposure. However, we still lack fundamental quantitative understanding of the extent to which repertoire diversity is predetermined. Therefore, we implemented a systems immunology framework for quantifying repertoire predetermination on three distinct levels: (1) B cell development (pre-B cell, naive B cell, plasma cell), (2) antigen exposure (three structurally different proteins), and (3) four antibody repertoire components (V-gene usage, clonal expansion, clonal diversity, repertoire size) extracted from antibody repertoire sequencing data (400 million reads). Across all three levels, we detected a dynamic balance of high genetic (e.g., >90% for V-gene usage and clonal expansion in naive B cells) and antigen-driven (e.g., 40% for clonal diversity in plasma cells) predetermination and stochastic variation. Our study has implications for the prediction and manipulation of humoral immunity.Keywords: Ig-seq; bioinformatics; systems immunology
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28514665 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2017.04.054
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423