[HTML][HTML] Clinical T cell receptor repertoire deep sequencing and analysis: an application to monitor immune reconstitution following cord blood transplantation

AS Gkazi, BK Margetts, T Attenborough… - Frontiers in …, 2018 - frontiersin.org
AS Gkazi, BK Margetts, T Attenborough, L Mhaldien, JF Standing, T Oakes, JM Heather
Frontiers in immunology, 2018frontiersin.org
Spectratyping assays are well recognized as the clinical gold standard for assessing the T
cell receptor (TCR) repertoire in haematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) recipients.
These assays use length distributions of the hyper variable complementarity-determining
region 3 (CDR3) to characterize a patient's T cell immune reconstitution post-transplant.
However, whilst useful, TCR spectratyping is notably limited by its resolution, with the
technique unable to provide data on the individual clonotypes present in a sample. High …
Spectratyping assays are well recognized as the clinical gold standard for assessing the T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire in haematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) recipients. These assays use length distributions of the hyper variable complementarity-determining region 3 (CDR3) to characterize a patient's T cell immune reconstitution post-transplant. However, whilst useful, TCR spectratyping is notably limited by its resolution, with the technique unable to provide data on the individual clonotypes present in a sample. High-resolution clonotype data are necessary to provide quantitative clinical TCR assessments and to better understand clonotype dynamics during clinically relevant events such as viral infections or GvHD. In this study we developed and applied a CDR3 Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) methodology to assess the TCR repertoire in cord blood transplant (CBT) recipients. Using this, we obtained comprehensive TCR data from 16 CBT patients and 5 control cord samples at Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH). These were analyzed to provide a quantitative measurement of the TCR repertoire and its constituents in patients post-CBT. We were able to both recreate and quantify inferences typically drawn from spectratyping data. Additionally, we demonstrate that an NGS approach to TCR assessment can provide novel insights into the recovery of the immune system in these patients. We show that NGS can be used to accurately quantify TCR repertoire diversity and to provide valuable inference on clonotypes detected in a sample. We serially assessed the progress of T cell immune reconstitution demonstrating that there is dramatic variation in TCR diversity immediately following transplantation and that the dynamics of T cell immune reconstitution is perturbed by the presence of GvHD. These findings provide a proof of concept for the adoption of NGS TCR sequencing in clinical practice.
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