Next-Generation Immune Repertoire Sequencing as a Clue to Elucidate the Landscape of Immune Modulation by Host-Gut Microbiome Interactions

The human immune system is a fine network consisted of the innumerable numbers of functional cells that balance the immunity and tolerance against various endogenous and environmental challenges. Although advances in modern immunology have revealed a role of many unique immune cell subsets, technolo...

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Published inFrontiers in immunology Vol. 9; p. 668
Main Authors Ichinohe, Tatsuo, Miyama, Takahiko, Kawase, Takakazu, Honjo, Yasuko, Kitaura, Kazutaka, Sato, Hiroyuki, Shin-I, Tadasu, Suzuki, Ryuji
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 03.04.2018
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Summary:The human immune system is a fine network consisted of the innumerable numbers of functional cells that balance the immunity and tolerance against various endogenous and environmental challenges. Although advances in modern immunology have revealed a role of many unique immune cell subsets, technologies that enable us to capture the whole landscape of immune responses against specific antigens have been not available to date. Acquired immunity against various microorganisms including host microbiome is principally founded on T cell and B cell populations, each of which expresses antigen-specific receptors that define a unique clonotype. Over the past several years, high-throughput next-generation sequencing has been developed as a powerful tool to profile T- and B-cell receptor repertoires in a given individual at the single-cell level. Sophisticated immuno-bioinformatic analyses by use of this innovative methodology have been already implemented in clinical development of antibody engineering, vaccine design, and cellular immunotherapy. In this article, we aim to discuss the possible application of high-throughput immune receptor sequencing in the field of nutritional and intestinal immunology. Although there are still unsolved caveats, this emerging technology combined with single-cell transcriptomics/proteomics provides a critical tool to unveil the previously unrecognized principle of host-microbiome immune homeostasis. Accumulation of such knowledge will lead to the development of effective ways for personalized immune modulation through deeper understanding of the mechanisms by which the intestinal environment affects our immune ecosystem.
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Reviewed by: Pinyi Lu, Biotherapeutics, Inc., United States; Yanfei Zhang, Geisinger Health System, United States
Specialty section: This article was submitted to Nutritional Immunology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Immunology
These authors have contributed equally to this work.
Edited by: Nadiya V. Boyko, Uzhhorod National University, Ukraine
ISSN:1664-3224
1664-3224
DOI:10.3389/fimmu.2018.00668