[HTML][HTML] Deep sequencing of the T-cell receptor repertoire demonstrates polyclonal T-cell infiltrates in psoriasis

JL Harden, D Hamm, N Gulati, MA Lowes… - …, 2015 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
F1000Research, 2015ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
It is well known that infiltration of pathogenic T-cells plays an important role in psoriasis
pathogenesis. However, the antigen specificity of these activated T-cells is relatively
unknown. Previous studies using T-cell receptor polymerase chain reaction technology
(TCR-PCR) have suggested there are expanded T-cell receptor (TCR) clones in psoriatic
skin, suggesting a response to an unknown psoriatic antigen. Here we describe the results
of high-throughput deep sequencing of the entire αβ-and γδ-TCR repertoire in normal …
Abstract
It is well known that infiltration of pathogenic T-cells plays an important role in psoriasis pathogenesis. However, the antigen specificity of these activated T-cells is relatively unknown. Previous studies using T-cell receptor polymerase chain reaction technology (TCR-PCR) have suggested there are expanded T-cell receptor (TCR) clones in psoriatic skin, suggesting a response to an unknown psoriatic antigen. Here we describe the results of high-throughput deep sequencing of the entire αβ-and γδ-TCR repertoire in normal healthy skin and psoriatic lesional and non-lesional skin. From this study, we were able to determine that there is a significant increase in the abundance of unique β-and γ-TCR sequences in psoriatic lesional skin compared to non-lesional and normal skin, and that the entire T-cell repertoire in psoriasis is polyclonal, with similar diversity to normal and non-lesional skin. Comparison of the αβ-and γδ-TCR repertoire in paired non-lesional and lesional samples showed many common clones within a patient, and these close were often equally abundant in non-lesional and lesional skin, again suggesting a diverse T-cell repertoire. Although there were similar (and low) amounts of shared β-chain sequences between different patient samples, there was significantly increased sequence sharing of the γ-chain in psoriatic skin from different individuals compared to those without psoriasis. This suggests that although the T-cell response in psoriasis is highly polyclonal, particular γδ-T-cell subsets may be associated with this disease. Overall, our findings present the feasibility of this technology to determine the entire αβ-and γδ-T-cell repertoire in skin, and that psoriasis contains polyclonal and diverse αβ-and γδ-T-cell populations.
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