Repertoire analyses reveal T cell antigen receptor sequence features that influence T cell fate.
Kaitlyn A LagattutaJoyce B KangAparna NathanKristen E PaukenAnna Helena JonssonDeepak A RaoArlene H SharpeKazuyoshi IshigakiSoumya RaychaudhuriPublished in: Nature immunology (2022)
T cells acquire a regulatory phenotype when their T cell antigen receptors (TCRs) experience an intermediate- to high-affinity interaction with a self-peptide presented via the major histocompatibility complex (MHC). Using TCRβ sequences from flow-sorted human cells, we identified TCR features that promote regulatory T cell (T reg ) fate. From these results, we developed a scoring system to quantify TCR-intrinsic regulatory potential (TiRP). When applied to the tumor microenvironment, TiRP scoring helped to explain why only some T cell clones maintained the conventional T cell (T conv ) phenotype through expansion. To elucidate drivers of these predictive TCR features, we then examined the two elements of the T reg TCR ligand separately: the self-peptide and the human MHC class II molecule. These analyses revealed that hydrophobicity in the third complementarity-determining region (CDR3β) of the TCR promotes reactivity to self-peptides, while TCR variable gene (TRBV gene) usage shapes the TCR's general propensity for human MHC class II-restricted activation.