4.5 Article

Landscape of T-cell repertoires with public COVID-19-associated T-cell receptors in pre-pandemic risk cohorts

Journal

CLINICAL & TRANSLATIONAL IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 10, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cti2.1340

Keywords

COVID-19; public T-cell receptors; risk cohort; T-cell repertoire

Categories

Funding

  1. German Research Foundation [CRC 841]
  2. Martin-Luther-University Halle

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The study suggests that a proportion of the T-cell response to SARS-CoV-2 in COVID-19 patients is mediated by public TCRs that can also be found in the immune repertoires of unexposed individuals. These public TCR clones with reproducible detection in patient blood have significant implications for understanding and monitoring the immune response to COVID-19.
Objectives. T cells have an essential role in the antiviral defence. Public T-cell receptor (TCR) clonotypes are expanded in a substantial proportion of COVID-19 patients. We set out to exploit their potential use as read-out for COVID-19 T-cell immune responses. Methods. We searched for COVID-19-associated T-cell clones with public TCRs, as defined by identical complementarity-determining region 3 (CDR3) beta chain amino acid sequence that can be reproducibly detected in the blood of COVID-19 patients. Of the different clonotype identification algorithms used in this study, deep sequencing of brain tissue of five patients with fatal COVID-19 delivered 68 TCR clonotypes with superior representation across 140 immune repertoires of unrelated COVID-19 patients. Results. Mining of immune repertoires from subjects not previously exposed to the virus showed that these clonotypes can be found in almost 20% of pre-pandemic immune repertoires of healthy subjects, with lower representation in repertoires from risk groups like individuals above the age of 60 years or patients with cancer. Conclusion. Together, our data show that at least a proportion of the SARS-CoV-2 T-cell response is mediated by public TCRs that are present in repertoires of unexposed individuals. The lower representation of these clones in repertoires of risk groups or failure to expand such clones may contribute to more unfavorable clinical COVID-19 courses.

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