A new method for quantitative analysis of the T cell receptor V region repertoires in healthy common marmosets by microplate hybridization assay

The common marmoset, Callithrix jacchus, is one of the smallest primates and is increasingly used for an experimental nonhuman primate model in many research fields. Analysis of T cell receptor (TCR) repertoires is a powerful tool to investigate T cell immunity in terms of antigen specificity and va...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of immunological methods 2012-10, Vol.384 (1-2), p.81-91
Hauptverfasser: Kitaura, Kazutaka, Fujii, Yoshiki, Matsutani, Takaji, Shirai, Kenji, Suzuki, Satsuki, Takasaki, Tomohiko, Shimada, Shin, Kametani, Yoshie, Shiina, Takashi, Takabayashi, Shuji, Katoh, Hideki, Ogasawara, Kouetsu, Kurane, Ichiro, Suzuki, Ryuji
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The common marmoset, Callithrix jacchus, is one of the smallest primates and is increasingly used for an experimental nonhuman primate model in many research fields. Analysis of T cell receptor (TCR) repertoires is a powerful tool to investigate T cell immunity in terms of antigen specificity and variability of TCR expression. However, monoclonal antibodies specific for many TCR Vα or Vβ chains have not been created. We have recently identified a large number of TCRα chain variable (TRAV) and TCRβ chain variable (TRBV) sequences from a cDNA library of common marmosets. The purpose of this study is to develop a new method for analysis of TCR repertoires in the common marmoset using this sequence information. This method is based on a microplate hybridization technique using 32 TRAV-specific and 32 TRBV-specific oligoprobes following an adaptor-ligation PCR. This enables the easy quantitation of the respective TRAV and TRBV expression levels. No cross-hybridization among specific-oligoprobes and very low variances in repeated measures of the same samples was found, demonstrating high specificity and reproducibility. Furthermore, this method was validated by an antihuman Vβ23 antibody which specifically bound to marmoset Vβ23. Using this method, we analyzed TCR repertoires from various tissue samples (PBMCs, spleen, lymph node and thymus) and isolated T cell subpopulations (CD4+CD8+, CD4+CD8− and CD4−CD8+) from the thymus of 10 common marmosets. Neither tissue-specific nor T cell subpopulation-specific differences was found in TRAV and TRBV repertoires. These results suggest that, unlike mice, TCR repertoires in the common marmoset are not affected by endogenous superantigens and are conserved among individuals, among tissues, and among T cell subpopulations. Thus, TCR repertoire analysis with high specificity and reproducibility is a very useful technique, with the potential to replace flow cytometric analysis using a panel of TRV-specific antibodies, many of which remain unavailable. ► A new method was developed for TCR repertoire analysis in the common marmoset. ► This method was a very useful technique with high specificity and reproducibility. ► TCR repertoire was not different among tissues and among T cell subpopulations. ► This method has the potential to replace antibody-based flow cytometric analysis.
ISSN:0022-1759
1872-7905
DOI:10.1016/j.jim.2012.07.012