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High-Throughput Single-Cell Analysis of B Cell Receptor Usage among Autoantigen-Specific Plasma Cells in Celiac Disease
Author(s) -
Bishnudeo Roy,
Ralf S. Neumann,
Omri Snir,
Rasmus Iversen,
Geir Kjetil Sandve,
Knut E.A. Lundin,
Ludvig M. Sollid
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.1700169
Subject(s) - disease , cell , plasma cell , receptor , throughput , microbiology and biotechnology , medicine , biology , immunology , computer science , genetics , antibody , telecommunications , wireless
Characterization of Ag-specific BCR repertoires is essential for understanding disease mechanisms involving humoral immunity. This is optimally done by interrogation of paired H chain V region (V H ) and L chain V region (V L ) sequences of individual and Ag-specific B cells. By applying single-cell high-throughput sequencing on gut lesion plasma cells (PCs), we have analyzed the transglutaminase 2 (TG2)-specific V H :V L autoantibody repertoire of celiac disease (CD) patients. Autoantibodies against TG2 are a hallmark of CD, and anti-TG2 IgA-producing gut PCs accumulate in patients upon gluten ingestion. Altogether, we analyzed paired V H and V L sequences of 1482 TG2-specific and 1421 non-TG2-specific gut PCs from 10 CD patients. Among TG2-specific PCs, we observed a striking bias in IGHV and IGKV/IGLV gene usage, as well as pairing preferences with a particular presence of the IGHV5-51:IGKV1-5 pair. Selective and biased V H :V L pairing was particularly evident among expanded clones. In general, TG2-specific PCs had lower numbers of mutations both in V H and V L genes than in non-TG2-specific PCs. TG2-specific PCs using IGHV5-51 had particularly few mutations. Importantly, V L segments paired with IGHV5-51 displayed proportionally low mutation numbers, suggesting that the low mutation rate among IGHV5-51 PCs is dictated by the BCR specificity. Finally, we observed selective amino acid changes in V H and V L and striking CDR3 length and J segment selection among TG2-specific IGHV5-51:IGKV1-5 pairs. Hence this study reveals features of a disease- and Ag-specific autoantibody repertoire with preferred V H :V L usage and pairings, limited mutations, clonal dominance, and selection of particular CDR3 sequences.

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