| Literature DB >> 30089728 |
Susan DeWolf1, Boris Grinshpun2, Thomas Savage1, Sai Ping Lau1, Aleksandar Obradovic1, Brittany Shonts1, Suxiao Yang1, Heather Morris1, Julien Zuber1, Robert Winchester3, Megan Sykes1, Yufeng Shen4.
Abstract
Alloreactive T lymphocytes are the primary mediators of immune responses in transplantation, both in the graft-versus-host and host-versus-graft directions. While essentially all clones comprising the human T cell repertoire have been selected on self-peptide presented by self-human leukocyte antigens (self-HLAs), much remains to be understood about the nature of clones capable of responding to allo-HLA molecules. Quantitative tools to study these cells are critical to understand fundamental features of this important response; however, the large size and diversity of the alloreactive T cell repertoire in humans presents a great technical challenge. We have developed a high-throughput T cell receptor (TCR) sequencing approach to characterize the human alloresponse. We present a statistical method to model T cell clonal frequency distribution and quantify repertoire diversity. Using these approaches, we measured the diversity and frequency of distinct alloreactive CD4+ and CD8+ T cell populations in HLA-mismatched responder-stimulator pairs. Our findings indicate that the alloimmune repertoire is highly specific for a given pair of individuals, that most alloreactive clones circulate at low frequencies, and that a high proportion of TCRs is likely able to recognize alloantigens.Entities:
Keywords: Bioinformatics; Immunology; T cells; T-cell receptor; Transplantation
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30089728 PMCID: PMC6129121 DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.121256
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JCI Insight ISSN: 2379-3708