scholarly journals Clinical Experience With Modified, Single-Tube T-Cell Receptor Vβ Flow Cytometry Analysis for T-Cell Clonality

2016 ◽  
Vol 145 (4) ◽  
pp. 467-485 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Wu ◽  
Melanie M. Anderson ◽  
Megan Othus ◽  
Brent L. Wood
Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 1451-1451
Author(s):  
Chao Wang ◽  
Qiang Gong ◽  
Weiwei Zhang ◽  
Javeed Iqbal ◽  
Yang Hu ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction: Diversity of the T-cell receptor (TCR) repertoire reflects the initial V(D)J recombination events as shaped by selection by self and foreign antigens. Next generation sequencing is a powerful method for profiling the TCR repertoire, including sequences encoding complementarity-determining region 3 (CDR3). Peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL) is a group of malignancies that originate from mature T-cells. T-cell clonality of PTCL is routinely evaluated with a PCR-based method to detect TCR gamma and less frequently beta chain rearrangements using genomic DNA. However, there are limitations with this approach, chief among which is the lack of sequence information. To date, the TCR repertoire of different subtypes of PTCL remains poorly defined. Objective: The purpose of this study was to determine the utility of RNA-seq for assessing T-cell clonality and analyzing the TCR usage in PTCL samples. Methods: We analyzed RNA-seq data from 30 angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma (AITL), 23 Anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL), 10 PTCL-NOS, and 17 NKCL. Data from naïve T cells, TFH cells, and T-effector cells (CD4+ CD45RA− TCRβ+ PD-1lo CXCR5lo PSGL-1hi) were obtained from publicly available resources. Referenced TCR and immunoglobulin transcripts according to the International ImMunoGeneTics Information System (IMGT) database were quantified by Kallisto software. We divided the pattern of Vβ (T-cell receptor beta variable region) into three categories: monoclonal (mono- or bi-allelic), oligoclonal (3-4 dominant clones), and polyclonal. CDR3 sequences were extracted by MiXCR program. PCR of the gamma chain using genomic DNA was utilized to validate the clonality of selected cases. Single nucleotide variants (SNVs) were called from aligned RNA-seq data using Samtools and VarScan 2 programs. Results: Analysis of RNA-seq data identified preferential usage of TCR-Vβ, Dβ (diversity region), and Jβ (joining region), length diversity of CDR3, and usage of nontemplated bases. Dominant clones could be identified by transcriptome sequencing in most cases of AITL (21/30), ALCL (14/23), and PTCL-NOS (7/10). Median CDR3 length is 42 nucleotides (nt) in normal T cells, 41 nt in ALCL, 48 nt in PTCL-NOS, and 44 nt in AITL. In 30 AITL samples, 20 showed monoclonal Vβ with a single peak, and 9 showed polyclonal Vβ. One case had two dominant clones with different CDR3, only one of which was in frame, implying biallelic rearrangements. As many as 3511 clones supported by at least four reads could be detected in polyclonal cases. In monoclonal cases, the dominant clone varied between 11.8% and 92.8% of TCR with Vβ rearrangements. TRBV 20-1, which is the most commonly used segment in normal T cells, is also frequently used in the dominant clones in AITL. The monoclonal AITL cases showed mutation of TET2, RHOA, DNMT3A or IDH2 whereas most of the polyclonal cases were negative or had low VAF mutation suggesting low or absent of tumor infiltrate in the specimen sequenced. There is no obvious correlation of any of the mutations with Vβ usage. Clonal B cell expansion was noted in some AITL samples. The occurrence of a preferential TRBV9 expansion in PTCL-NOS was striking. More than half of ALCL samples (14/23) showed expression of clonal Vβ, but 3/14 dominant clones were out-of-frame. γ chain expression was very low in cells expressing TCRαβ, but both expression levels and clonality were higher in TCRγδ expressing tumors. NKCL did not express significant levels of TCR Vβ or Vγ genes. Discussion/Interpretation: Transcriptome sequencing is a useful tool for understanding the TCR repertoire in T cell lymphoma and for detecting clonality for diagnosis. Clonal, often out-of-frame, Vβ transcripts are detectable in most ALCL cases and preferential TRBV9 usage is found in PTCL-NOS. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (Supplement_6) ◽  
pp. vi98-vi98
Author(s):  
Jasim Kada Benotmane ◽  
Jan Kückelhaus ◽  
Kevin Joseph ◽  
Jürgen Beck ◽  
Oliver Schnell ◽  
...  

Abstract The diversity to T cell responses and clonality in spatially heterogeneous glioblastoma is of paramount importance to explore underlying mechanisms of anti-tumor immunity. Spatial transcriptomics, a novel technology to map the transcriptional architecture, is technically limited to discover T cell receptor (TCR) sequences as the 3' approach lacks sufficient coverage. Here, we established SPTCR-seq, a method to capture TCR sequences followed by long-read sequencing to enable full-length TCR reconstruction. We performed 10X Visium spatial transcriptomics on 9 primary and recurrent glioblastoma with both 3’-sequencing and SPTCR-seq. For SPTCR-seq, we target enriched T cell receptor sequences by capturing by hybridization followed by Oxford-Nanopore long-read sequencing. The on-target rate was above 80% for captured TCR genes and spatial barcode was successfully aligned in more than 60%. IgBlast and MixCR were used to reconstruct the TCR and map T cell clonality. Within our recent developed spatial transcriptomic analysis framework (SPATA2), we build a novel toolbox, SPATA-Immunology, which enables integration of stRNA-sequencing data and spatially resolved TCR sequencing. Our data showed that clonal evolution of T cells is limited to regional areas underpinned by significant spatial autocorrelation coefficient (0.6-0.95, padj< 0.001). In the surrounding tumor cell spots, the recently described transcriptional program “reactive immune” (RI), was significantly enriched. Using spotlight, a computational approach to project scRNA-sequencing into the spatial space, we found a local enrichment of CD163 positive macrophages exclusively in areas of large T cell clonality. Imaging mass cytometry of a consecutive section confirmed the spatial confluence of T-cell infiltration and CD163-positive macrophages. Through DeepTCR we uncovered potential epitopes which correlate with T cell clonality and might help to discover novel targets for CART therapy. Spatial profiling of TCR sequences through SPTCR-seq is a powerful tool to investigate anti-tumor immunity in glioblastoma and allows to discover general and personalized targets for immunotherapy.


2003 ◽  
Vol 90 (08) ◽  
pp. 279-292 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takaji Matsutani ◽  
Yoshihiko Sakurai ◽  
Takeshi Yoshioka ◽  
Yuji Tsuruta ◽  
Ryuji Suzuki ◽  
...  

SummaryReplacement therapy with factor VIII (FVIII) products causes immune abnormalities in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-seronegative hemophilia patients. However, the question remains why an absolute increase in the number of CD8+ T-cells and diminished proliferation responses of lymphocytes to antigen stimulation in vitro occurs in HIV-seronegative hemophilia patients.To examine whether the FVIII products induce skewing of T-cell receptor (TCR) repertoires, TCR variable region α-chain and β–chain repertoires were analyzed for peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from 15 hemophilia patients treated with heated and/or non-heated plasma-derived FVIII concentrates and 10 age-matched healthy adults. Also, T-cell clonality was compared between these groups using complementarity-determining region 3 (CDR3) size spectratyping. The skewing of TCR repertoires was significantly greater for hemophilia patients than healthy controls. The extent of T-cell clonality was greater for hemophilia patients than the controls, indicating that clonal T-cells frequently expanded in hemophilia patients. The skew in TCR usage and clonal expansion were primarily observed in patients treated with non-heated plasma-derived products.The spectratyping and sequencing of CDR3 regions revealed that the clonal expansion of T-cells was observed for CD8+ T-cells, but not CD4+ T-cells.These results suggest that extensive expansion of CD8+ T-cells is induced by some viruses other than HIV present in FVIII preparations, and the resulting accumulation of CD8+ T-cells is responsible for changes in peripheral T-cell population in HIV-seronegative hemophilia patients.


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