Profiling the T-cell receptor beta-chain repertoire by massively parallel sequencing (original) (raw)
- J. Douglas Freeman1,3,
- René L. Warren1,3,
- John R. Webb2,
- Brad H. Nelson2 and
- Robert A. Holt1,4
- 1 BC Cancer Agency, Michael Smith Genome Sciences Centre, Vancouver, British Columbia V5Z 1L3, Canada;
- 2 BC Cancer Agency, Deeley Research Centre, Victoria, British Columbia V8R 6V5, Canada
- ↵3 These authors contributed equally to this work.
Abstract
T-cell receptor (TCR) genomic loci undergo somatic V(D)J recombination, plus the addition/subtraction of nontemplated bases at recombination junctions, in order to generate the repertoire of structurally diverse T cells necessary for antigen recognition. TCR beta subunits can be unambiguously identified by their hypervariable CDR3 (Complement Determining Region 3) sequence. This is the site of V(D)J recombination encoding the principal site of antigen contact. The complexity and dynamics of the T-cell repertoire remain unknown because the potential repertoire size has made conventional sequence analysis intractable. Here, we use 5′-RACE, Illumina sequencing, and a novel short read assembly strategy to sample CDR3β diversity in human T lymphocytes from peripheral blood. Assembly of 40.5 million short reads identified 33,664 distinct TCRβ clonotypes and provides precise measurements of CDR3β length diversity, usage of nontemplated bases, sequence convergence, and preferences for TRBV (T-cell receptor beta variable gene) and TRBJ (T-cell receptor beta joining gene) gene usage and pairing. CDR3 length between conserved residues of TRBV and TRBJ ranged from 21 to 81 nucleotides (nt). TRBV gene usage ranged from 0.01% for TRBV17 to 24.6% for TRBV20-1. TRBJ gene usage ranged from 1.6% for TRBJ2-6 to 17.2% for TRBJ2-1. We identified 1573 examples of convergence where the same amino acid translation was specified by distinct CDR3β nucleotide sequences. Direct sequence-based immunoprofiling will likely prove to be a useful tool for understanding repertoire dynamics in response to immune challenge, without a priori knowledge of antigen.
Footnotes
↵4 Corresponding author.
E-mail rholt{at}bcgsc.ca; fax (604) 877-6085.[Supplemental material is available online at http://www.genome.org. The TCRβ cDNA sequence and quality-score files have been submitted to the NCBI Short Read Archive (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/sra.cgi) under accession no. SRA008633.]
Article published online before print. Article and publication date are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.092924.109.
- Received February 18, 2009.
- Accepted June 9, 2009.
Copyright © 2009 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press