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Publication : T cell receptor repertoires of mice and humans are clustered in similarity networks around conserved public CDR3 sequences.

First Author  Madi A Year  2017
Journal  Elife Volume  6
PubMed ID  28731407 Mgi Jnum  J:256682
Mgi Id  MGI:6116782 Doi  10.7554/eLife.22057
Citation  Madi A, et al. (2017) T cell receptor repertoires of mice and humans are clustered in similarity networks around conserved public CDR3 sequences. Elife 6:e22057
abstractText  Diversity of T cell receptor (TCR) repertoires, generated by somatic DNA rearrangements, is central to immune system function. However, the level of sequence similarity of TCR repertoires within and between species has not been characterized. Using network analysis of high-throughput TCR sequencing data, we found that abundant CDR3-TCRbeta sequences were clustered within networks generated by sequence similarity. We discovered a substantial number of public CDR3-TCRbeta segments that were identical in mice and humans. These conserved public sequences were central within TCR sequence-similarity networks. Annotated TCR sequences, previously associated with self-specificities such as autoimmunity and cancer, were linked to network clusters. Mechanistically, CDR3 networks were promoted by MHC-mediated selection, and were reduced following immunization, immune checkpoint blockade or aging. Our findings provide a new view of T cell repertoire organization and physiology, and suggest that the immune system distributes its TCR sequences unevenly, attending to specific foci of reactivity.
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