scholarly journals T cell receptor beta germline variability is revealed by inference from repertoire data

2022 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Aviv Omer ◽  
Ayelet Peres ◽  
Oscar L Rodriguez ◽  
Corey T Watson ◽  
William Lees ◽  
...  

Abstract Background T and B cell receptor (TCR, BCR) repertoires constitute the foundation of adaptive immunity. Adaptive immune receptor repertoire sequencing (AIRR-seq) is a common approach to study immune system dynamics. Understanding the genetic factors influencing the composition and dynamics of these repertoires is of major scientific and clinical importance. The chromosomal loci encoding for the variable regions of TCRs and BCRs are challenging to decipher due to repetitive elements and undocumented structural variants. Methods To confront this challenge, AIRR-seq-based methods have recently been developed for B cells, enabling genotype and haplotype inference and discovery of undocumented alleles. However, this approach relies on complete coverage of the receptors’ variable regions, whereas most T cell studies sequence a small fraction of that region. Here, we adapted a B cell pipeline for undocumented alleles, genotype, and haplotype inference for full and partial AIRR-seq TCR data sets. The pipeline also deals with gene assignment ambiguities, which is especially important in the analysis of data sets of partial sequences. Results From the full and partial AIRR-seq TCR data sets, we identified 39 undocumented polymorphisms in T cell receptor Beta V (TRBV) and 31 undocumented 5 ′ UTR sequences. A subset of these inferences was also observed using independent genomic approaches. We found that a single nucleotide polymorphism differentiating between the two documented T cell receptor Beta D2 (TRBD2) alleles is strongly associated with dramatic changes in the expressed repertoire. Conclusions We reveal a rich picture of germline variability and demonstrate how a single nucleotide polymorphism dramatically affects the composition of the whole repertoire. Our findings provide a basis for annotation of TCR repertoires for future basic and clinical studies.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aviv Omer ◽  
Ayelet Peres ◽  
Oscar L Rodrigues ◽  
Corey T Watson ◽  
William Lees ◽  
...  

T and B cell repertoires constitute the foundation of adaptive immunity. Adaptive immune receptor repertoire sequencing (AIRR-seq) is a common approach to study immune system dynamics. Understanding the genetic factors influencing the composition and dynamics of these repertoires is of major scientific and clinical importance. The chromosomal loci encoding for the variable regions of T and B cell receptors (TCRs and BCRs, respectively) are challenging to decipher due to repetitive elements and undocumented structural variants. To confront this challenge, AIRR-seq-based methods have been developed recently for B cells, enabling genotype and haplotype inference and discovery of undocumented alleles. Applying these methods to AIRR-seq data reveals a plethora of undocumented genomic variations. However, this approach relies on complete coverage of the receptors' variable regions, and most T cell studies sequence only a small fraction of the variable region. Here, we adapted BCR inference methods to full and partial TCR sequences, and identified 38 undocumented polymorphisms in TRBV, 15 of them were also observed in genomic data assemblies. Further, we identified 31 undocumented 5' UTR sequences. A subset of these inferences was also observed using independent genomic approaches. We found the two documented TRBD2 alleles to be equally abundant in the population, and show that the single nucleotide that differentiates them is strongly associated with dramatic changes in the expressed repertoire. Our findings expand the knowledge of genomic variation in the TRB (T Cell Receptor Beta) locus and provide a basis for annotation of TCR repertoires for future basic and clinical studies.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pieter Meysman ◽  
Nicolas De Neuter ◽  
Sofie Gielis ◽  
Danh Bui Thi ◽  
Benson Ogunjimi ◽  
...  

AbstractThe T-cell receptor is responsible for recognizing potentially harmful epitopes presented on cell surfaces. The binding rules that govern this recognition between receptor and epitope is currently an unsolved problem, yet one of great interest. Several methods have been proposed recently to perform supervised classification of T-cell receptor sequences, but this requires known examples of T-cell sequences for a given epitope. Here we study the viability of various methods to perform unsupervised clustering of distinct T-cell receptor sequences and how these clusters relate to their target epitope. The goal is to provide an overview of the performance of various distance metrics on two large independent T-cell receptor sequence data sets. Our results confirm the presence of structural distinct T-cell groups that target identical epitopes. In addition, we put forward several recommendations to perform T-cell receptor sequence clustering.


1993 ◽  
Vol 90 (22) ◽  
pp. 10454-10458 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. F. Callan ◽  
H. T. Reyburn ◽  
P. Bowness ◽  
T. H. Ottenhoff ◽  
I. Engel ◽  
...  

1991 ◽  
Vol 88 (19) ◽  
pp. 8357-8361 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. W. Choi ◽  
B. Kotzin ◽  
J. Lafferty ◽  
J. White ◽  
M. Pigeon ◽  
...  

Genes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 571
Author(s):  
Giovanna Linguiti ◽  
Sofia Kossida ◽  
Ciro Leonardo Pierri ◽  
Joumana Jabado-Michaloud ◽  
Geraldine Folch ◽  
...  

The bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) belongs to the Cetartiodactyla and, similarly to other cetaceans, represents the most successful mammalian colonization of the aquatic environment. Here we report a genomic, evolutionary, and expression study of T. truncatus T cell receptor beta (TRB) genes. Although the organization of the dolphin TRB locus is similar to that of the other artiodactyl species, with three in tandem D-J-C clusters located at its 3′ end, its uniqueness is given by the reduction of the total length due essentially to the absence of duplications and to the deletions that have drastically reduced the number of the germline TRBV genes. We have analyzed the relevant mature transcripts from two subjects. The simultaneous availability of rearranged T cell receptor α (TRA) and TRB cDNA from the peripheral blood of one of the two specimens, and the human/dolphin amino acids multi-sequence alignments, allowed us to calculate the most likely interactions at the protein interface between the alpha/beta heterodimer in complex with major histocompatibility class I (MH1) protein. Interacting amino acids located in the complementarity-determining region according to IMGT numbering (CDR-IMGT) of the dolphin variable V-alpha and beta domains were identified. According to comparative modelization, the atom pair contact sites analysis between the human MH1 grove (G) domains and the T cell receptor (TR) V domains confirms conservation of the structure of the dolphin TR/pMH.


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