Single cell analysis reveals similar functional competence of dominant and nondominant CD8 T-cell clonotypes

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Abstract

Immune protection from infectious diseases and cancer is mediated by individual T cells of different clonal origin. Their functions are tightly regulated but not yet fully characterized. Understanding the contribution of each T cell will improve the prediction of immune protection based on laboratory assessment of T-cell responses. Here we developed techniques for simultaneous molecular and functional assessment of single CD8 T cells directly ex vivo. We studied two groups of patients with melanoma after vaccination with two closely related tumor antigenic peptides. Vaccination induced T cells with strong memory and effector functions, as found in virtually all T cells of the first patient group, and fractions of T cells in the second group. Interestingly, high functionality was not restricted to dominant clonotypes. Rather, dominant and non-dominant clonotypes acquired equal functional competence. In parallel, this was also found for EBV- and CMV-specific T cells. Thus, the nondominant clonotypes may contribute similarly to immunity as their dominant counterparts.

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Speiser, D. E., Wieckowski, S., Gupta, B., Iancu, E. M., Baumgaertner, P., Baitsch, L., … Rufer, N. (2011). Single cell analysis reveals similar functional competence of dominant and nondominant CD8 T-cell clonotypes. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 108(37), 15318–15323. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1105419108

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