Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8418235 | Journal of Immunological Methods | 2013 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Mature T cells express either CD8 or CD4, defining two physiologically distinct populations of T cells. CD8Â + T cells, or killer T-cells, and CD4Â + T cells, or helper T cells, effect different aspects of T cell mediated adaptive immunity. Currently, determining the ratio of CD4Â + to CD8Â + T cells requires flow cytometry or immunohistochemistry. The genomic T cell receptor locus is rearranged during T cell maturation, generating a highly variable T cell receptor locus in each mature T cell. As part of thymic maturation, T cells that will become CD4Â + versus CD8Â + are subjected to different selective pressures. In this study, we apply high-throughput next-generation sequencing to T cells from both a healthy cohort and a cohort with an autoimmune disease (multiple sclerosis) to identify sequence features in the variable CDR3 region of the rearranged T cell receptor gene that distinguish CD4Â + from CD8Â + T cells. We identify sequence features that differ between CD4Â + and CD8Â + T cells, including Variable gene usage and CDR3 region length. We implement a likelihood model to estimate relative proportions of CD4Â + and CD8Â + T cells using these features. Our model accurately estimates the proportion of CD4Â + and CD8Â + T cell sequences in samples from healthy and diseased immune systems, and simulations indicate that it can be applied to as few as 1000 T cell receptor sequences; we validate this model using in vitro mixtures of T cell sequences, and by comparing the results of our method to flow cytometry using peripheral blood samples. We believe our computational method for determining the CD4:CD8 ratio in T cell samples from sequence data will provide additional useful information for any samples on which high-throughput TCR sequencing is performed, potentially including some solid tumors.
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Authors
Ryan Emerson, Anna Sherwood, Cindy Desmarais, Sachin Malhotra, Deborah Phippard, Harlan Robins,