PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Evaluation of the capacities of mouse TCR profiling from short read RNA-seq data.

  • Yu Bai,
  • David Wang,
  • Wentian Li,
  • Ying Huang,
  • Xuan Ye,
  • Janelle Waite,
  • Thomas Barry,
  • Kurt H Edelmann,
  • Natasha Levenkova,
  • Chunguang Guo,
  • Dimitris Skokos,
  • Yi Wei,
  • Lynn E Macdonald,
  • Wen Fury

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207020
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 11
p. e0207020

Abstract

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Profiling T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire via short read transcriptome sequencing (RNA-Seq) has a unique advantage of probing simultaneously TCRs and the genome-wide RNA expression of other genes. However, compared to targeted amplicon approaches, the shorter read length is more prone to mapping error. In addition, only a small percentage of the genome-wide reads may cover the TCR loci and thus the repertoire could be significantly under-sampled. Although this approach has been applied in a few studies, the utility of transcriptome sequencing in probing TCR repertoires has not been evaluated extensively. Here we present a systematic assessment of RNA-Seq in TCR profiling. We evaluate the power of both Fluidigm C1 full-length single cell RNA-Seq and bulk RNA-Seq in characterizing the repertoires of different diversities under either naïve conditions or after immunogenic challenges. Standard read length and sequencing coverage were employed so that the evaluation was conducted in accord with the current RNA-Seq practices. Despite high sequencing depth in bulk RNA-Seq, we encountered difficulty quantifying TCRs with low transcript abundance (<1%). Nevertheless, top enriched TCRs with an abundance of 1-3% or higher can be faithfully detected and quantified. When top TCR sequences are of interest and transcriptome sequencing is available, it is worthwhile to conduct a TCR profiling using the RNA-Seq data.