Half of the T-cell repertoire combinatorial diversity is genetically determined in humans and humanized mice

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Abstract

In humanized mice, the T-cell repertoire is derived from genetically identical human progenitors in distinct animals. Thus, careful comparison of the T-cell repertoires of humanized mice with those of humans may reveal the contribution of genetic determinism on T-cell repertoire formation. Here, we performed a comprehensive assessment of the distribution of V-J combinations of the human β chain of the T-cell receptor (hTRBV) in NOD.SCID.γc -/- (NSG) humanized mice. We observed that numerous V-J combinations were equally distributed in the thymus and in the periphery of humanized mice compared with human references. A global analysis of the data, comparing repertoire perturbation indices in humanized NSG mice and unrelated human PBMCs, reveals that 50% of the hTRBV families significantly overlapped. Using multivariate ranking and bootstrap analyses, we found that 18% of all possible V-J combinations contributed close to 50% of the expressed diversity, with significant over-representation of BV5-J1.1+1.2 and BV6-J1.1+1.2 rearrangements. Finally, comparison of CD3 - and CD3 + thymocyte repertoires indicated that the observed V-J combination overlap was already present before TCR-MHC selection in the thymus. Altogether, our results show that half of the T-cell repertoire combinatorial diversity in humans is genetically determined. © 2012 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.

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Pham, H. P., Manuel, M., Petit, N., Klatzmann, D., Cohen-Kaminsky, S., Six, A., & Marodon, G. (2012). Half of the T-cell repertoire combinatorial diversity is genetically determined in humans and humanized mice. European Journal of Immunology, 42(3), 760–770. https://doi.org/10.1002/eji.201141798

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