ORIGINAL RESEARCH

Estimating the number of HIV-specific T-cells in healthy donors using high-throughput sequencing profiles of T-cell receptor repertoires

Eliseev AV, Fedorova AD, Lebedin MY, Chudakov DM, Shugay M
About authors

Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University, Moscow, Russia

Correspondence should be addressed: Mikhail Shugay
ul. Miklukho-Maklaya, d. 16/10, Moscow, Russia, 117997; moc.liamg@yaguhs.liahkim

About paper

Funding: this work was supported by the Russian Science Foundation (Grant No. 17-15-01495).

All authors' contribution to this work is equal: selection and analysis of literature, research planning, data collection, analysis, and interpretation, drafting of a manuscript, editing.

Received: 2017-10-23 Accepted: 2017-10-28 Published online: 2018-01-14
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In-depth study of mechanisms of immune response to the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is critical for better understanding of how immunodeficiency develops in patients with HIV, as well as for designing effective immunotherapy strategies and vaccines against the virus. In this work we analyze sequencing profiles of T-cell receptor repertoires previously obtained from healthy donors (601 Americans and 65 Russians) to estimate the population frequency of HIV-specific naive T-cells. We demonstrate that frequencies of T-cells recognizing different HIV epitopes vary considerably across the population (F-statistic = 2007, p < 10–100, ANOVA). Although the frequency of T-lymphocytes recognizing a particular epitope does not change significantly between the individuals, it still largely depends on the presence of certain HLA alleles (p < 0.01, post-hoc Tukey’s test), cytomegalovirus infection (F = 61, p = 7 × 10–15, ANOVA), and age (Pearson correlation coefficient ranging from –0.53 to –0.14 in different groups).

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