Frontiers in Immunology (Sep 2022)

Evaluation and comparison of adaptive immunity through analyzing the diversities and clonalities of T-cell receptor repertoires in the peripheral blood

  • Yue Zhuo,
  • Xin Yang,
  • Ping Shuai,
  • Liangliang Yang,
  • Xueping Wen,
  • Xuemei Zhong,
  • Shihan Yang,
  • Shaoxian Xu,
  • Yuping Liu,
  • Zhixin Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.916430
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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The adaptive immune system plays an important role in defending against different kinds of diseases, including infection and cancer. There has been a longtime need for a simple method to quantitatively evaluate the potency of adaptive immunity in our bodies. The tremendously diversified T-cell receptor (TCR) repertoires are the foundation of the adaptive immune system. In this study, we analyzed the expressed TCRβ repertoires in the peripheral blood of 582 healthy donors and 60 cancer patients. The TCR repertoire in each individual is different, with different usages of TCR Vβ and Jβ genes. Importantly, the TCR diversity and clonality change along with age and disease situation. Most elder individuals and cancer patients have elevated numbers of large TCRβ clones and reduced numbers of shared common clones, and thus, they have very low TCR diversity index (D50) values. These results reveal the alteration of the expressed TCRβ repertoire with aging and oncogenesis, and thus, we hypothesize that the TCR diversity and clonality in the peripheral blood might be used to evaluate and compare the adaptive immunities among different individuals in clinical practice.

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