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High frequency of herpesvirus-specific clonotypes in the human T cell repertoire can remain stable over decades with minimal turnover.


ABSTRACT: High-throughput T cell receptor sequencing on sequentially banked blood samples from healthy individuals has shown that high-frequency clonotypes can remain relatively stable for up to 18 years, with minimal inflation, deflation, or turnover. These populations included T cell expansions specific for Epstein-Barr virus. Thus, in spite of exposure to a barrage of microorganisms over the course of life, the dominant clonotypes in the mature peripheral T cell repertoire can alter surprisingly little.

SUBMITTER: Neller MA 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3536364 | biostudies-literature | 2013 Jan

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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High frequency of herpesvirus-specific clonotypes in the human T cell repertoire can remain stable over decades with minimal turnover.

Neller M A MA   Burrows J M JM   Rist M J MJ   Miles J J JJ   Burrows S R SR  

Journal of virology 20121017 1


High-throughput T cell receptor sequencing on sequentially banked blood samples from healthy individuals has shown that high-frequency clonotypes can remain relatively stable for up to 18 years, with minimal inflation, deflation, or turnover. These populations included T cell expansions specific for Epstein-Barr virus. Thus, in spite of exposure to a barrage of microorganisms over the course of life, the dominant clonotypes in the mature peripheral T cell repertoire can alter surprisingly little  ...[more]

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