Human Genomics (Sep 2024)

The T-cell repertoire of Spanish patients with COVID-19 as a strategy to link T-cell characteristics to the severity of the disease

  • Fernando Marín-Benesiu,
  • Lucia Chica-Redecillas,
  • Verónica Arenas-Rodríguez,
  • Esperanza de Santiago,
  • Silvia Martínez-Diz,
  • Ginesa López-Torres,
  • Ana Isabel Cortés-Valverde,
  • Catalina Romero-Cachinero,
  • Carmen Entrala-Bernal,
  • Francisco Javier Fernandez-Rosado,
  • Luis Javier Martínez-González,
  • Maria Jesus Alvarez-Cubero

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40246-024-00654-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Background The architecture and dynamics of T cell populations are critical in orchestrating the immune response to SARS-CoV-2. In our study, we used T Cell Receptor sequencing (TCRseq) to investigate TCR repertoires in 173 post-infection COVID-19 patients. Methods The cohort included 98 mild and 75 severe cases with a median age of 53. We amplified and sequenced the TCR β chain Complementary Determining Region 3 (CDR3b) and performed bioinformatic analyses to assess repertoire diversity, clonality, and V/J allelic usage between age, sex and severity groups. CDR3b amino acid sequence inference was performed by clustering structural motifs and filtering validated reactive CDR3b to COVID-19. Results Our results revealed a pronounced decrease in diversity and an increase in clonal expansion in the TCR repertoires of severe COVID-19 patients younger than 55 years old. These results reflect the observed trends in patients older than 55 years old (both mild and severe). In addition, we identified a significant reduction in the usage of key V alleles (TRBV14, TRBV19, TRBV15 and TRBV6-4) associated with disease severity. Notably, severe patients under 55 years old had allelic patterns that resemble those over 55 years old, accompanied by a skewed frequency of COVID-19-related motifs. Conclusions Present results suggest that severe patients younger than 55 may have a compromised TCR repertoire contributing to a worse disease outcome. Graphical Abstract

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