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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(18): e2113766119, 2022 05 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35486691

ABSTRACT

The capacity of humoral B cell-mediated immunity to effectively respond to and protect against pathogenic infections is largely driven by the presence of a diverse repertoire of polyclonal antibodies in the serum, which are produced by plasma cells (PCs). Recent studies have started to reveal the balance between deterministic mechanisms and stochasticity of antibody repertoires on a genotypic level (i.e., clonal diversity, somatic hypermutation, and germline gene usage). However, it remains unclear if clonal selection and expansion of PCs follow any deterministic rules or are stochastic with regards to phenotypic antibody properties (i.e., antigen-binding, affinity, and epitope specificity). Here, we report on the in-depth genotypic and phenotypic characterization of clonally expanded PC antibody repertoires following protein immunization. We find that clonal expansion drives antigen specificity of the most expanded clones (top ∼10), whereas among the rest of the clonal repertoire antigen specificity is stochastic. Furthermore, we report both on a polyclonal repertoire and clonal lineage level that antibody-antigen binding affinity does not correlate with clonal expansion or somatic hypermutation. Last, we provide evidence for convergence toward targeting dominant epitopes despite clonal sequence diversity among the most expanded clones. Our results highlight the extent to which clonal expansion can be ascribed to antigen binding, affinity, and epitope specificity, and they have implications for the assessment of effective vaccines.


Subject(s)
Antigens , Plasma Cells , Animals , Antibodies/genetics , Antibody Affinity , Epitopes/genetics , Mice
2.
Eur J Immunol ; 52(2): 297-311, 2022 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34727578

ABSTRACT

Plasma cells and their secreted antibodies play a central role in the long-term protection against chronic viral infection. However, due to experimental limitations, a comprehensive description of linked genotypic, phenotypic, and antibody repertoire features of plasma cells (gene expression, clonal frequency, virus specificity, and affinity) has been challenging to obtain. To address this, we performed single-cell transcriptome and antibody repertoire sequencing of the murine BM plasma cell population following chronic lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus infection. Our single-cell sequencing approach recovered full-length and paired heavy- and light-chain sequence information for thousands of plasma cells and enabled us to perform recombinant antibody expression and specificity screening. Antibody repertoire analysis revealed that, relative to protein immunization, chronic infection led to increased levels of clonal expansion, class-switching, and somatic variants. Furthermore, antibodies from the highly expanded and class-switched (IgG) plasma cells were found to be specific for multiple viral antigens and a subset of clones exhibited cross-reactivity to nonviral and autoantigens. Integrating single-cell transcriptome data with antibody specificity suggested that plasma cell transcriptional phenotype was correlated to viral antigen specificity. Our findings demonstrate that chronic viral infection can induce and sustain plasma cell clonal expansion, combined with significant somatic hypermutation, and can generate cross-reactive antibodies.


Subject(s)
Antibodies, Viral , Clonal Selection, Antigen-Mediated , Immunoglobulin Heavy Chains , Immunoglobulin Light Chains , Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis , Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus/immunology , Plasma Cells/immunology , Single-Cell Analysis , Animals , Antibodies, Viral/genetics , Antibodies, Viral/immunology , Chronic Disease , Female , Immunoglobulin Heavy Chains/genetics , Immunoglobulin Heavy Chains/immunology , Immunoglobulin Light Chains/genetics , Immunoglobulin Light Chains/immunology , Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis/genetics , Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis/immunology , Mice
3.
BMC Genomics ; 23(1): 289, 2022 Apr 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35410128

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The continued spread of SARS-CoV-2 and emergence of new variants with higher transmission rates and/or partial resistance to vaccines has further highlighted the need for large-scale testing and genomic surveillance. However, current diagnostic testing (e.g., PCR) and genomic surveillance methods (e.g., whole genome sequencing) are performed separately, thus limiting the detection and tracing of SARS-CoV-2 and emerging variants. RESULTS: Here, we developed DeepSARS, a high-throughput platform for simultaneous diagnostic detection and genomic surveillance of SARS-CoV-2 by the integration of molecular barcoding, targeted deep sequencing, and computational phylogenetics. DeepSARS enables highly sensitive viral detection, while also capturing genomic diversity and viral evolution. We show that DeepSARS can be rapidly adapted for identification of emerging variants, such as alpha, beta, gamma, and delta strains, and profile mutational changes at the population level. CONCLUSIONS: DeepSARS sets the foundation for quantitative diagnostics that capture viral evolution and diversity. DeepSARS uses molecular barcodes (BCs) and multiplexed targeted deep sequencing (NGS) to enable simultaneous diagnostic detection and genomic surveillance of SARS-CoV-2. Image was created using Biorender.com .


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , SARS-CoV-2 , COVID-19/diagnosis , Genomics , Humans , Mutation , SARS-CoV-2/genetics , Whole Genome Sequencing
4.
Proc Biol Sci ; 288(1945): 20202793, 2021 02 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33622131

ABSTRACT

Neuroinflammation plays a crucial role during ageing and various neurological conditions, including Alzheimer's disease, multiple sclerosis and infection. Technical limitations, however, have prevented an integrative analysis of how lymphocyte immune receptor repertoires and their accompanying transcriptional states change with age in the central nervous system. Here, we leveraged single-cell sequencing to simultaneously profile B cell receptor and T cell receptor repertoires and accompanying gene expression profiles in young and old mouse brains. We observed the presence of clonally expanded B and T cells in the central nervous system of aged male mice. Furthermore, many of these B cells were of the IgM and IgD isotypes, and had low levels of somatic hypermutation. Integrating gene expression information additionally revealed distinct transcriptional profiles of these clonally expanded lymphocytes. Our findings implicate that clonally related T and B cells in the CNS of elderly mice may contribute to neuroinflammation accompanying homeostatic ageing.


Subject(s)
Central Nervous System , Transcriptome , Animals , B-Lymphocytes , Lymphocytes , Male , Mice
5.
Immunology ; 153(1): 31-41, 2018 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28898398

ABSTRACT

Monoclonal antibody discovery and engineering is a field that has traditionally been dominated by high-throughput screening platforms (e.g. hybridomas and surface display). In recent years the emergence of high-throughput sequencing has made it possible to obtain large-scale information on antibody repertoire diversity. Additionally, it has now become more routine to perform high-throughput sequencing on antibody repertoires to also directly discover antibodies. In this review, we provide an overview of the progress in this field to date and show how high-throughput screening and sequencing are converging to deliver powerful new workflows for monoclonal antibody discovery and engineering.


Subject(s)
Antibodies, Monoclonal/genetics , Antibodies, Monoclonal/immunology , Drug Discovery , Genetic Engineering , High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing , High-Throughput Screening Assays , Animals , Antibodies, Monoclonal/pharmacology , Drug Discovery/methods , Genetic Engineering/methods , High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing/methods , High-Throughput Screening Assays/methods , Humans
7.
iScience ; 26(3): 106055, 2023 Mar 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36852274

ABSTRACT

Although new genomics-based pipelines have potential to augment antibody discovery, these methods remain in their infancy due to an incomplete understanding of the selection process that governs B cell clonal selection, expansion, and antigen specificity. Furthermore, it remains unknown how factors such as aging and reduction of tolerance influence B cell selection. Here we perform single-cell sequencing of antibody repertoires and transcriptomes of murine B cells following immunizations with a model therapeutic antigen target. We determine the relationship between antibody repertoires, gene expression signatures, and antigen specificity across 100,000 B cells. Recombinant expression and characterization of 227 monoclonal antibodies revealed the existence of clonally expanded and class-switched antigen-specific B cells that were more frequent in young mice. Although integrating multiple repertoire features such as germline gene usage and transcriptional signatures failed to distinguish antigen-specific from nonspecific B cells, other features such as immunoglobulin G (IgG) subtype and sequence composition correlated with antigen specificity.

8.
Annu Rev Chem Biomol Eng ; 12: 39-62, 2021 06 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33852352

ABSTRACT

Adaptive immunity is mediated by lymphocyte B and T cells, which respectively express a vast and diverse repertoire of B cell and T cell receptors and, in conjunction with peptide antigen presentation through major histocompatibility complexes (MHCs), can recognize and respond to pathogens and diseased cells. In recent years, advances in deep sequencing have led to a massive increase in the amount of adaptive immune receptor repertoire data; additionally, proteomics techniques have led to a wealth of data on peptide-MHC presentation. These large-scale data sets are now making it possible to train machine and deep learning models, which can be used to identify complex and high-dimensional patterns in immune repertoires. This article introduces adaptive immune repertoires and machine and deep learning related to biological sequence data and then summarizes the many applications in this field, which span from predicting the immunological status of a host to the antigen specificity of individual receptors and the engineering of immunotherapeutics.


Subject(s)
Deep Learning , Adaptive Immunity , Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell/genetics , T-Lymphocytes
9.
NAR Genom Bioinform ; 3(2): lqab023, 2021 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33884369

ABSTRACT

High-throughput single-cell sequencing (scSeq) technologies are revolutionizing the ability to molecularly profile B and T lymphocytes by offering the opportunity to simultaneously obtain information on adaptive immune receptor repertoires (VDJ repertoires) and transcriptomes. An integrated quantification of immune repertoire parameters, such as germline gene usage, clonal expansion, somatic hypermutation and transcriptional states opens up new possibilities for the high-resolution analysis of lymphocytes and the inference of antigen-specificity. While multiple tools now exist to investigate gene expression profiles from scSeq of transcriptomes, there is a lack of software dedicated to single-cell immune repertoires. Here, we present Platypus, an open-source software platform providing a user-friendly interface to investigate B-cell receptor and T-cell receptor repertoires from scSeq experiments. Platypus provides a framework to automate and ease the analysis of single-cell immune repertoires while also incorporating transcriptional information involving unsupervised clustering, gene expression and gene ontology. To showcase the capabilities of Platypus, we use it to analyze and visualize single-cell immune repertoires and transcriptomes from B and T cells from convalescent COVID-19 patients, revealing unique insight into the repertoire features and transcriptional profiles of clonally expanded lymphocytes. Platypus will expedite progress by facilitating the analysis of single-cell immune repertoire and transcriptome sequencing.

10.
MAbs ; 11(8): 1367-1380, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31478465

ABSTRACT

Antibody engineering in mammalian cells offers the important advantage of expression and screening of libraries in their native conformation, increasing the likelihood of generating candidates with more favorable molecular properties. Major advances in cellular engineering enabled by CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing have made it possible to expand the use of mammalian cells in biotechnological applications. Here, we describe an antibody engineering and screening approach where complete variable light (VL) and heavy (VH) chain cassette libraries are stably integrated into the genome of hybridoma cells by enhanced Cas9-driven homology-directed repair (HDR), resulting in their surface display and secretion. By developing an improved HDR donor format that utilizes in situ linearization, we are able to achieve >15-fold improvement of genomic integration, resulting in a screening workflow that only requires a simple plasmid electroporation. This proved suitable for different applications in antibody discovery and engineering. By integrating and screening an immune library obtained from the variable gene repertoire of an immunized mouse, we could isolate a diverse panel of >40 unique antigen-binding variants. Additionally, we successfully performed affinity maturation by directed evolution screening of an antibody library based on random mutagenesis, leading to the isolation of several clones with affinities in the picomolar range.


Subject(s)
Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats , Gene Editing , Gene Library , Hybridomas/metabolism , Single-Chain Antibodies , Animals , Female , Mice , Mice, Inbred BALB C , Single-Chain Antibodies/genetics , Single-Chain Antibodies/metabolism
11.
Methods Mol Biol ; 1850: 79-111, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30242682

ABSTRACT

From the perspective of academic and small research laboratories, the most common and practical strategy for recombinant expression of full-length monoclonal antibodies is to perform transient plasmid transfection of mammalian cells, resulting in small-scale and limited protein production. The generation of stable antibody producing mammalian cell lines enables larger-scale and consistent expression, however this approach is rarely pursued due to the time-consuming and expensive process of single colony screening and characterization. In order to bridge the gap between the simplicity of transient transfection and consistent production by stable cell lines, we describe a method to stably integrate antibody genes into the endogenous immunogenomic loci of hybridoma cells using CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing. Initially, the antibody variable light (VL) chain is deleted by multiplexed Cas9 cleavage; subsequently, the variable heavy (VH) chain is replaced by a fluorescent reporter gene (mRuby) by Cas9-assisted homology-directed repair (HDR). This cell line is customized by replacing mRuby with a synthetic antibody (consisting of a VL, light constant region and VH) by once again using Cas9-assisted HDR. Due to hybridomas' inherent ability to surface display and secrete antibodies, they provide a suitable host for both the selection and the production process, substantially streamlining the process for stable cell line generation, and thus we refer to this platform as plug-and-(dis)play (PnP) hybridomas.


Subject(s)
Gene Editing/methods , Hybridomas/metabolism , Animals , Antibodies, Monoclonal , CRISPR-Cas Systems/genetics , Cell Line , Humans
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