Pathogens (Aug 2020)

The CMV-Specific CD8<sup>+</sup> T Cell Response Is Dominated by Supra-Public Clonotypes with High Generation Probabilities

  • Kilian Schober,
  • Pim Fuchs,
  • Jonas Mir,
  • Monika Hammel,
  • Lorenzo Fanchi,
  • Michael Flossdorf,
  • Dirk H. Busch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens9080650
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 8
p. 650

Abstract

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Evolutionary processes govern the selection of T cell clonotypes that are optimally suited to mediate efficient antigen-specific immune responses against pathogens and tumors. While the theoretical diversity of T cell receptor (TCR) sequences is vast, the antigen-specific TCR repertoire is restricted by its peptide epitope and the presenting major histocompatibility complex (pMHC). It remains unclear how many TCR sequences are recruited into an antigen-specific T cell response, both within and across different organisms, and which factors shape both of these distributions. Infection of mice with ovalbumin-expressing cytomegalovirus (IE2-OVA-mCMV) represents a well-studied model system to investigate T cell responses given their size and longevity. Here we investigated > 180,000 H2kb/SIINFEKL-recognizing TCR CDR3α or CDR3β sequences from 25 individual mice spanning seven different time points during acute infection and memory inflation. In-depth repertoire analysis revealed that from a pool of highly diverse, but overall limited sequences, T cell responses were dominated by public clonotypes, partly with unexpectedly extreme degrees of sharedness between individual mice (“supra-public clonotypes”). Public clonotypes were found exclusively in a fraction of TCRs with a high generation probability. Generation probability and degree of sharedness select for highly functional TCRs, possibly mediated through elevating intraindividual precursor frequencies of clonotypes.

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