Abstract

Abstract A competent T-cell receptor (TCR) repertoire contains TCRs recognizing both novel and experienced antigens. It is widely believed that the human TCR repertoire declines with age, but its precise change in size and clonal distribution with age has not been fully determined. Here, we investigated how the size and content of TCR repertoire changes with age by analyzing the TCR repertoire of human CD4+ and CD8+ T cells and their naïve and memory subsets from 30 healthy adults aged from 25 to 85 at first visit and an average of 9-year follow-up as second visit by RNAseq. First, we calculated abTCR repertoire changes with age and found a profound reduction of the TCRa and TCRb richness in naïve CD8+ T cells and an increase of clonal expansion especially in memory CD8 T cells compared to CD4+ T cells. We also study the degree of overlap of TCRa/b repertoire between naïve and memory T cells in each subject at the same visit and found little overlap of TCRa/b unique sequences between naïve and memory CD4 T cells and ~40% of the total TCRs in CD8 T cells. Moreover, we showed elevated overlap of TCR sequences between two visits in both CD4 and CD8 T cells with memory CD8 T cells as the highest. Finally, we determined the degree of TCR clonotypes shares among different subjects via the analysis of the sharing of TCR sequences in the 30 healthy adults. As results, we observed increased sharing of identical TCR between CD4 and CD8 T cells suggesting that the public clonotypes may share with the common pathogens shared in the population, particularly in the old population. Our findings showed more profound reduction in the CD8+TCR repertoire with age compared to CD4+ TCR repertoire. All together provide evidence of ab TCR sequence-based age-associated changes of T cells and their subsets.

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