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Deep sequencing of the TCRβ repertoire reveals T cell clonal expansion is associated with HTLV-1 proviral load in HAM/TSP patients

Authors :
Paolo A. Muraro
Kory R. Johnson
Alessandra de Paula Alves Sousa
Jun Zhu
Steven Jacobson
Joan Ohayon
Source :
Retrovirology
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
BioMed Central, 2015.

Abstract

HTLV-1 associated myelopathy/tropical spastic paraparesis (HAM/TSP) is associated with a chronic inflammatory central nervous system in which the host immune response against HTLV-1 infection is considered immunopathogenic. We have applied a new unbiased deep sequencing method of TCR repertoire to accurately measure the diversity and degree of clonal expansion of peripheral circulating T-cells in patients with HAM/TSP compared to age, gender, and ethnicity matched healthy controls. TCR libraries were generated using 5'rapid amplification of cDNA ends to amplify the V-D-J genes of unsorted T-cells obtained from peripheral blood. Over 100 million reads were analyzed using MiGec software (Shugay, et al., Nat Methods. 2014 Jun;11(6):653-5), that align and match the human TCR β-chain nucleotide sequences through IMGT database. T-cell clonotypes with high-quality CDR3 sequence were selected by a molecular identifier PCR strategy, which allowed for filtering PCR errors and correct for artificial sequences generated on a HiSeq 2000 Illumina system platform. By calculating the coefficient of variation of our dataset we considered clonal expansion as those unique TCR clonotypes showing reads >8. While we did not observe any significant statistical differences of the number of single clones (clonotypes with 1 read, P=0.62) between HAM/TSP patients and healthy controls groups, by contrast, a higher clonal expansion of the T-cell repertoire was observed in HAM/TSP patients when compared to healthy controls (unpaired parametric T-test with P=0.026). Interestingly, this clonal expansion of the HAM/TSP TCR repertoire correlated with the HTLV-I provirus load (as defined by digital PCR quantification of the HTLV-I tax gene) (r=0.64, P=0.008). Our findings strongly suggest that in this chronic neurological disorder, a strong dysregulated T-cell response may be driven by HTLV-I and that strategies to decrease virus may be of clinical benefit.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17424690
Volume :
12
Issue :
Suppl 1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Retrovirology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....28789ae9f61f7c146edb22e787e41ade