High-throughput pairing of T cell receptor α and β sequences

Bryan Howie(Adaptive Biotechnologies (United States)), Anna Sherwood(Adaptive Biotechnologies (United States)), Ashley D. Berkebile(Adaptive Biotechnologies (United States)), Jan Berka(Adaptive Biotechnologies (United States)), Ryan Emerson(Adaptive Biotechnologies (United States)), David Williamson(Adaptive Biotechnologies (United States)), Ilan R. Kirsch(Adaptive Biotechnologies (United States)), Marissa Vignali(Adaptive Biotechnologies (United States)), Mark J. Rieder(Adaptive Biotechnologies (United States)), Christopher S. Carlson(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Harlan Robins(Fred Hutch Cancer Center)
Science Translational Medicine
August 19, 2015
Cited by 217

Abstract

The T cell receptor (TCR) protein is a heterodimer composed of an α chain and a β chain. TCR genes undergo somatic DNA rearrangements to generate the diversity of T cell binding specificities needed for effective immunity. Recently, high-throughput immunosequencing methods have been developed to profile the TCR α (TCRA) and TCR β (TCRB) repertoires. However, these methods cannot determine which TCRA and TCRB chains combine to form a specific TCR, which is essential for many functional and therapeutic applications. We describe and validate a method called pairSEQ, which can leverage the diversity of TCR sequences to accurately pair hundreds of thousands of TCRA and TCRB sequences in a single experiment. Our TCR pairing method uses standard laboratory consumables and equipment without the need for single-cell technologies. We show that pairSEQ can be applied to T cells from both blood and solid tissues, such as tumors.


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