Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5590283 | Genomics, Proteomics & Bioinformatics | 2016 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1D) is an immune-mediated disease. The autoreactive T cells in T1D patients attack and destroy their own pancreatic cells. In order to systematically investigate the potential autoreactive T cell receptors (TCRs), we used a high-throughput immune repertoire sequencing technique to profile the spectrum of TCRs in individual T1D patients and controls. We sequenced the T cell repertoire of nine T1D patients, four type 2 diabetes (T2D) patients, and six nondiabetic controls. The diversity of the T cell repertoire in T1D patients was significantly decreased in comparison with T2D patients (PÂ =Â 7.0Eâ08 for CD4+ T cells, PÂ =Â 1.4Eâ04 for CD8+ T cells) and nondiabetic controls (PÂ =Â 2.7Eâ09 for CD4+ T cells, PÂ =Â 7.6Eâ06 for CD8+ T cells). Moreover, T1D patients had significantly more highly-expanded T cell clones than T2D patients (PÂ =Â 5.2Eâ06 for CD4+ T cells, PÂ =Â 1.9Eâ07 for CD8+ T cells) and nondiabetic controls (PÂ =Â 1.7Eâ07 for CD4+ T cells, PÂ =Â 3.3Eâ03 for CD8+ T cells). Furthermore, we identified a group of highly-expanded T cell receptor clones that are shared by more than two T1D patients. Although further validation in larger cohorts is needed, our data suggest that T cell receptor diversity measurements may become a valuable tool in investigating diabetes, such as using the diversity as an index to distinguish different types of diabetes.
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Authors
Yin Tong, Zhoufang Li, Hua Zhang, Ligang Xia, Meng Zhang, Ying Xu, Zhanhui Wang, Michael W. Deem, Xiaojuan Sun, Jiankui He,