4.8 Article

Commonality despite exceptional diversity in the baseline human antibody repertoire

Journal

NATURE
Volume 566, Issue 7744, Pages 393-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-0879-y

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (Center for HIV/AIDS Vaccine Immunology and Immunogen Discovery) [UM1AI100663]
  2. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (Center for Viral Systems Biology) [U19AI135995]
  3. International AIDS Vaccine Initiative (IAVI) through the Neutralizing Antibody Consortium [SFP1849]
  4. Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard

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In principle, humans can produce an antibody response to any non-self-antigen molecule in the appropriate context. This flexibility is achieved by the presence of a large repertoire of naive antibodies, the diversity of which is expanded by somatic hypermutation following antigen exposure(1). The diversity of the naive antibody repertoire in humans is estimated to be at least 10(12) unique antibodies(2). Because the number of peripheral blood B cells in a healthy adult human is on the order of 5 x 10(9), the circulating B cell population samples only a small fraction of this diversity. Full-scale analyses of human antibody repertoires have been prohibitively difficult, primarily owing to their massive size. The amount of information encoded by all of the rearranged antibody and T cell receptor genes in one person-the 'genome' of the adaptive immune system-exceeds the size of the human genome by more than four orders of magnitude. Furthermore, because much of the B lymphocyte population is localized in organs or tissues that cannot be comprehensively sampled from living subjects, human repertoire studies have focused on circulating B cells(3). Here we examine the circulating B cell populations of ten human subjects and present what is, to our knowledge, the largest single collection of adaptive immune receptor sequences described to date, comprising almost 3 billion antibody heavy-chain sequences. This dataset enables genetic study of the baseline human antibody repertoire at an unprecedented depth and granularity, which reveals largely unique repertoires for each individual studied, a subpopulation of universally shared antibody clonotypes, and an exceptional overall diversity of the antibody repertoire.

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