Genesis of the αβ T-cell receptor

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Abstract

The T-cell (TCR) repertoire relies on the diversity of receptors composed of two chains, called α and β, to recognize pathogens. Using results of high throughput sequencing and computational chain-pairing experiments of human TCR repertoires, we quantitively characterize the αβ generation process. We estimate the probabilities of a rescue recombination of the β chain on the second chromosome upon failure or success on the first chromosome. Unlike β chains, α chains recombine simultaneously on both chromosomes, resulting in correlated statistics of the two genes which we predict using a mechanistic model. We find that ~35% of cells express both α chains. Altogether, our statistical analysis gives a complete quantitative mechanistic picture that results in the observed correlations in the generative process. We learn that the probability to generate any TCRαβ is lower than 10−12 and estimate the generation diversity and sharing properties of the αβ TCR repertoire.

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Dupic, T., Marcou, Q., Walczak, A. M., & Mora, T. (2019). Genesis of the αβ T-cell receptor. PLoS Computational Biology, 15(3). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006874

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