Skip to main content

Crossreactive public TCR sequences undergo positive selection in the human thymic repertoire.

Citation
Khosravi-Maharlooei, M., et al. “Crossreactive Public Tcr Sequences Undergo Positive Selection In The Human Thymic Repertoire.”. The Journal Of Clinical Investigation, pp. 2446-2462.
Center Columbia University
Author Mohsen Khosravi-Maharlooei, Aleksandar Obradovic, Aditya Misra, Keshav Motwani, Markus Holzl, Howard R Seay, Susan DeWolf, Grace Nauman, Nichole Danzl, Haowei Li, Siu-Hong Ho, Robert Winchester, Yufeng Shen, Todd M Brusko, Megan Sykes
Keywords autoimmunity, immunology, T cell development, T-cell receptor, tolerance
Abstract

We investigated human T-cell repertoire formation using high throughput TCRβ CDR3 sequencing in immunodeficient mice receiving human hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and human thymus grafts. Replicate humanized mice generated diverse and highly divergent repertoires. Repertoire narrowing and increased CDR3β sharing was observed during thymocyte selection. While hydrophobicity analysis implicated self-peptides in positive selection of the overall repertoire, positive selection favored shorter shared sequences that had reduced hydrophobicity at positions 6 and 7 of CDR3βs, suggesting weaker interactions with self-peptides than unshared sequences, possibly allowing escape from negative selection. Sharing was similar between autologous and allogeneic thymi and occurred between different cell subsets. Shared sequences were enriched for allo-crossreactive CDR3βs and for Type 1 diabetes-associated autoreactive CDR3βs. Single-cell TCR-sequencing showed increased sharing of CDR3αs compared to CDR3βs between mice. Our data collectively implicate preferential positive selection for shared human CDR3βs that are highly cross-reactive. While previous studies suggested a role for recombination bias in producing "public" sequences in mice, our study is the first to demonstrate a role for thymic selection. Our results implicate positive selection for promiscuous TCRβ sequences that likely evade negative selection, due to their low affinity for self-ligands, in the abundance of "public" human TCRβ sequences.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
The Journal of clinical investigation
Volume
129
Issue
6
Number of Pages
2446-2462
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
1558-8238
DOI
10.1172/JCI124358
Alternate Journal
J. Clin. Invest.
PMID
30920391
PMCID
PMC6546456
Download citation