4.7 Article

T-cell receptor repertoires share a restricted set of public and abundant CDR3 sequences that are associated with self-related immunity

Journal

GENOME RESEARCH
Volume 24, Issue 10, Pages 1603-1612

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1101/gr.170753.113

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Funding

  1. Krenter Institute
  2. Minerva Foundation
  3. Federal German Ministry for Education and Research
  4. Weizmann-UK program
  5. I-CORE Program of the Planning and Budgeting Committee
  6. Israel Science Foundation
  7. M.D. Moross Institute for Cancer Research

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The T-cell receptor (TCR) repertoire is formed by random recombinations of genomic precursor elements; the resulting combinatorial diversity renders unlikely extensive TCR sharing between individuals. Here, we studied CDR3 beta amino acid sequence sharing in a repertoire-wide manlier, using high-throughput TCR-seq in 28 healthy mice. We uncovered hundreds of public sequences shared by most mice. Public CDR3 sequences, relative to private sequences, are two orders of magnitude more abundant on average, express restricted V/J segments, and feature high convergent nucleic acid recombination. Functionally, public sequences are enriched for MHC-diverse CDR3 sequences that were previously associated with autoimmune, allograft, and tumor-related reactions, but not with anti-pathogen-related reactions. Public CDR3 sequences are shared between mice of different MHC haplotypes, but are associated with different, MHC-dependent, V genes. Thus, despite their random generation process, TCR repertoires express a degree of uniformity in their post-genomic organization. These results, together with numerical simulations of TCR genomic rearrangements, suggest that biases and convergence in TCR recombination combine with ongoing selection to generate a restricted subset of self-associated, public CDR3 TCR sequences, and invite reexamination of the basic mechanisms of T-cell repertoire formation.

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