Abstract
Adaptive immune cells (i.e., lymphocytes of the B and T lineage) are equipped with unique antigen receptors, which collectively form a highly diverse repertoire. Within the lymphocytes, the antigen receptor diversity is created at the DNA level through recombination processes in the immunoglobulin (IG) and T cell receptor (TR) genes that encode these receptors. This gives rise to an enormous immune repertoire (a.k.a. the “immunome”) that can be studied in health and disease, both in a scientific and clinical context. In fact, the inherent distinctiveness of the IG/TR rearrangements on a per cell basis allows their usage as unique DNA fingerprints, which enables precision medicine, or for that matter “precision immunology.” The field of (fundamental and translational) research on IG/TR repertoire diversity is the topic of the Immunogenetics volume in the Methods in Molecular Biology series.
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Langerak, A. W. (2022). The Advent of Precision Immunology: Immunogenetics at the Center of Immune Cell Analysis in Health and Disease. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 2453, pp. 1–5). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-0716-2115-8_1
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