Scientific Reports (Jun 2023)

T cell repertoire breadth is associated with the number of acute respiratory infections in the LoewenKIDS birth cohort

  • Lisa Paschold,
  • Cornelia Gottschick,
  • Susan Langer,
  • Bianca Klee,
  • Sophie Diexer,
  • Ivona Aksentijevich,
  • Christoph Schultheiß,
  • Oliver Purschke,
  • Peggy Riese,
  • Stephanie Trittel,
  • Roland Haase,
  • Frank Dressler,
  • Wolfgang Eberl,
  • Johannes Hübner,
  • Till Strowig,
  • Carlos A. Guzman,
  • Rafael Mikolajczyk,
  • Mascha Binder

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-36144-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract We set out to gain insight into peripheral blood B and T cell repertoires from 120 infants of the LoewenKIDS birth cohort to investigate potential determinants of early life respiratory infections. Low antigen-dependent somatic hypermutation of B cell repertoires, as well as low T and B cell repertoire clonality, high diversity, and high richness especially in public T cell clonotypes reflected the immunological naivety at 12 months of age when high thymic and bone marrow output are associated with relatively few prior antigen encounters. Infants with inadequately low T cell repertoire diversity or high clonality showed higher numbers of acute respiratory infections over the first 4 years of life. No correlation of T or B cell repertoire metrics with other parameters such as sex, birth mode, older siblings, pets, the onset of daycare, or duration of breast feeding was noted. Together, this study supports that—regardless of T cell functionality—the breadth of the T cell repertoire is associated with the number of acute respiratory infections in the first 4 years of life. Moreover, this study provides a valuable resource of millions of T and B cell receptor sequences from infants with available metadata for researchers in the field.