Abstract

The T cell receptor (TCR) orchestrates immune responses by binding to foreign peptides presented at the cell surface in the context of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules. Effective immunity requires that all possible foreign peptide-MHC molecules are recognized or risks leaving holes in immune coverage that pathogens could quickly evolve to exploit. It is unclear how a limited pool of <10(8) human TCRs can successfully provide immunity to the vast array of possible different peptides that could be produced from 20 proteogenic amino acids and presented by self-MHC molecules (>10(15) distinct peptide-MHCs). One possibility is that T cell immunity incorporates an extremely high level of receptor degeneracy, enabling each TCR to recognize multiple peptides. However, the extent of such TCR degeneracy has never been fully quantified. Here, we perform a comprehensive experimental and mathematical analysis to reveal that a single patient-derived autoimmune CD8(+) T cell clone of pathogenic relevance in human type I diabetes recognizes >one million distinct decamer peptides in the context of a single MHC class I molecule. A large number of peptides that acted as substantially better agonists than the wild-type "index" preproinsulin-derived peptide (ALWGPDPAAA) were identified. The RQFGPDFPTI peptide (sampled from >10(8) peptides) was >100-fold more potent than the index peptide despite differing from this sequence at 7 of 10 positions. Quantification of this previously unappreciated high level of CD8(+) T cell cross-reactivity represents an important step toward understanding the system requirements for adaptive immunity and highlights the enormous potential of TCR degeneracy to be the causative factor in autoimmune disease.

Highlights

  • How does a limited pool of Ͻ108 T cell receptors (TCRs) provide immunity to Ͼ1015 antigens? Results: A single TCR can respond to Ͼone million different decamer peptides

  • Combinatorial Peptide Library (CPL) Screening Reveals the Potential for TCR Degeneracy—To determine the extent of T cell cross-reactivity, we probed the peptide recognition degeneracy of the autoimmune CD8ϩ T cell clone IE6 using a CPL comprising 9.36 ϫ 1012 different decamer peptides (Fig. 1)

  • Despite the huge potential importance of TCR degeneracy to human health, there has never been a comprehensive attempt to quantify the number of peptides that can be recognized by a single TCR

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Summary

Introduction

How does a limited pool of Ͻ108 T cell receptors (TCRs) provide immunity to Ͼ1015 antigens? Results: A single TCR can respond to Ͼone million different decamer peptides. Effective immunity requires that all possible foreign peptideMHC molecules are recognized or risks leaving holes in immune coverage that pathogens could quickly evolve to exploit It is unclear how a limited pool of 1015 distinct peptide-MHCs). The RQFGPDFPTI peptide (sampled from >108 peptides) was >100-fold more potent than the index peptide despite differing from this sequence at 7 of 10 positions Quantification of this previously unappreciated high level of CD8؉ T cell crossreactivity represents an important step toward understanding the system requirements for adaptive immunity and highlights the enormous potential of TCR degeneracy to be the causative factor in autoimmune disease

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