Age-Related Decrease in TCR Repertoire Diversity Measured with Deep and Normalized Sequence Profiling

Olga V. Britanova(Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry), Ekaterina V. Putintseva(Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry), Mikhail Shugay(Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University), Ekaterina M. Merzlyak(Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry), Maria A. Turchaninova(Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry), Dmitriy B. Staroverov(Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry), Dmitriy A. Bolotin(Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry), Sergey Lukyanov(Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University), Е. А. Богданова(Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry), Ilgar Z. Mamedov(Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry), Yuri B. Lebedev(Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry), Dmitriy M. Chudakov(Central European Institute of Technology)
The Journal of Immunology
February 8, 2014
Cited by 475

Abstract

The decrease of TCR diversity with aging has never been studied by direct methods. In this study, we combined high-throughput Illumina sequencing with unique cDNA molecular identifier technology to achieve deep and precisely normalized profiling of TCR β repertoires in 39 healthy donors aged 6-90 y. We demonstrate that TCR β diversity per 10(6) T cells decreases roughly linearly with age, with significant reduction already apparent by age 40. The percentage of naive T cells showed a strong correlation with measured TCR diversity and decreased linearly up to age 70. Remarkably, the oldest group (average age 82 y) was characterized by a higher percentage of naive CD4(+) T cells, lower abundance of expanded clones, and increased TCR diversity compared with the previous age group (average age 62 y), suggesting the influence of age selection and association of these three related parameters with longevity. Interestingly, cross-analysis of individual TCR β repertoires revealed a set >10,000 of the most representative public TCR β clonotypes, whose abundance among the top 100,000 clones correlated with TCR diversity and decreased with aging.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis