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spelling ftfrontimediafig:oai:figshare.com:article/16826005 2023-05-15T15:32:04+02:00 DataSheet_1_Profiling the T Cell Receptor Alpha/Delta Locus in Salmonids.zip Eva-Stina Edholm Christopher Graham Fenton Stanislas Mondot Ruth H. Paulssen Marie-Paule Lefranc Pierre Boudinot Susana Magadan 2021-10-18T13:05:46Z https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.753960.s001 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/DataSheet_1_Profiling_the_T_Cell_Receptor_Alpha_Delta_Locus_in_Salmonids_zip/16826005 unknown doi:10.3389/fimmu.2021.753960.s001 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/DataSheet_1_Profiling_the_T_Cell_Receptor_Alpha_Delta_Locus_in_Salmonids_zip/16826005 CC BY 4.0 CC-BY Immunology Applied Immunology (incl. Antibody Engineering Xenotransplantation and T-cell Therapies) Autoimmunity Cellular Immunology Humoural Immunology and Immunochemistry Immunogenetics (incl. Genetic Immunology) Innate Immunity Transplantation Immunology Tumour Immunology Immunology not elsewhere classified Genetic Immunology Animal Immunology Veterinary Immunology T cell receptor repertoire salmonid fish VDJ annotation TRA/TRD locus gene rearrangement adaptive immunity Dataset 2021 ftfrontimediafig https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.753960.s001 2021-10-20T23:00:10Z In jawed vertebrates, two major T cell populations have been characterized. They are defined as α/β or γ/δ T cells, based on the expressed T cell receptor. Salmonids (family Salmonidae) include two key teleost species for aquaculture, rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) which constitute important models for fish immunology and important targets for vaccine development. The growing interest to decipher the dynamics of adaptive immune responses against pathogens or vaccines has resulted in recent efforts to sequence the immunoglobulin (IG) or antibodies and T cell receptor (TR) repertoire in these species. In this context, establishing a comprehensive and coherent locus annotation is the fundamental basis for the analysis of high-throughput repertoire sequencing data. We therefore decided to revisit the description and annotation of TRA/TRD locus in Atlantic salmon and two strains of rainbow trout (Swanson and Arlee) using the now available high-quality genome assemblies. Phylogenetic analysis of functional TRA/TRD V genes from these three genomes led to the definition of 25 subgroups shared by both species, some with particular feature. A total of 128 TRAJ genes were identified in Salmo, the majority with a close counterpart in Oncorhynchus. Analysis of expressed TRA repertoire indicates that most TRAV gene subgroups are expressed at mucosal and systemic level. The present work on TRA/TRD locus annotation along with the analysis of TRA repertoire sequencing data show the feasibility and advantages of a common salmonid TRA/TRD nomenclature that allows an accurate annotation and analysis of high-throughput sequencing results, across salmonid T cell subsets. Dataset Atlantic salmon Salmo salar Frontiers: Figshare
institution Open Polar
collection Frontiers: Figshare
op_collection_id ftfrontimediafig
language unknown
topic Immunology
Applied Immunology (incl. Antibody Engineering
Xenotransplantation and T-cell Therapies)
Autoimmunity
Cellular Immunology
Humoural Immunology and Immunochemistry
Immunogenetics (incl. Genetic Immunology)
Innate Immunity
Transplantation Immunology
Tumour Immunology
Immunology not elsewhere classified
Genetic Immunology
Animal Immunology
Veterinary Immunology
T cell receptor
repertoire
salmonid fish
VDJ annotation
TRA/TRD locus
gene rearrangement
adaptive immunity
spellingShingle Immunology
Applied Immunology (incl. Antibody Engineering
Xenotransplantation and T-cell Therapies)
Autoimmunity
Cellular Immunology
Humoural Immunology and Immunochemistry
Immunogenetics (incl. Genetic Immunology)
Innate Immunity
Transplantation Immunology
Tumour Immunology
Immunology not elsewhere classified
Genetic Immunology
Animal Immunology
Veterinary Immunology
T cell receptor
repertoire
salmonid fish
VDJ annotation
TRA/TRD locus
gene rearrangement
adaptive immunity
Eva-Stina Edholm
Christopher Graham Fenton
Stanislas Mondot
Ruth H. Paulssen
Marie-Paule Lefranc
Pierre Boudinot
Susana Magadan
DataSheet_1_Profiling the T Cell Receptor Alpha/Delta Locus in Salmonids.zip
topic_facet Immunology
Applied Immunology (incl. Antibody Engineering
Xenotransplantation and T-cell Therapies)
Autoimmunity
Cellular Immunology
Humoural Immunology and Immunochemistry
Immunogenetics (incl. Genetic Immunology)
Innate Immunity
Transplantation Immunology
Tumour Immunology
Immunology not elsewhere classified
Genetic Immunology
Animal Immunology
Veterinary Immunology
T cell receptor
repertoire
salmonid fish
VDJ annotation
TRA/TRD locus
gene rearrangement
adaptive immunity
description In jawed vertebrates, two major T cell populations have been characterized. They are defined as α/β or γ/δ T cells, based on the expressed T cell receptor. Salmonids (family Salmonidae) include two key teleost species for aquaculture, rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) which constitute important models for fish immunology and important targets for vaccine development. The growing interest to decipher the dynamics of adaptive immune responses against pathogens or vaccines has resulted in recent efforts to sequence the immunoglobulin (IG) or antibodies and T cell receptor (TR) repertoire in these species. In this context, establishing a comprehensive and coherent locus annotation is the fundamental basis for the analysis of high-throughput repertoire sequencing data. We therefore decided to revisit the description and annotation of TRA/TRD locus in Atlantic salmon and two strains of rainbow trout (Swanson and Arlee) using the now available high-quality genome assemblies. Phylogenetic analysis of functional TRA/TRD V genes from these three genomes led to the definition of 25 subgroups shared by both species, some with particular feature. A total of 128 TRAJ genes were identified in Salmo, the majority with a close counterpart in Oncorhynchus. Analysis of expressed TRA repertoire indicates that most TRAV gene subgroups are expressed at mucosal and systemic level. The present work on TRA/TRD locus annotation along with the analysis of TRA repertoire sequencing data show the feasibility and advantages of a common salmonid TRA/TRD nomenclature that allows an accurate annotation and analysis of high-throughput sequencing results, across salmonid T cell subsets.
format Dataset
author Eva-Stina Edholm
Christopher Graham Fenton
Stanislas Mondot
Ruth H. Paulssen
Marie-Paule Lefranc
Pierre Boudinot
Susana Magadan
author_facet Eva-Stina Edholm
Christopher Graham Fenton
Stanislas Mondot
Ruth H. Paulssen
Marie-Paule Lefranc
Pierre Boudinot
Susana Magadan
author_sort Eva-Stina Edholm
title DataSheet_1_Profiling the T Cell Receptor Alpha/Delta Locus in Salmonids.zip
title_short DataSheet_1_Profiling the T Cell Receptor Alpha/Delta Locus in Salmonids.zip
title_full DataSheet_1_Profiling the T Cell Receptor Alpha/Delta Locus in Salmonids.zip
title_fullStr DataSheet_1_Profiling the T Cell Receptor Alpha/Delta Locus in Salmonids.zip
title_full_unstemmed DataSheet_1_Profiling the T Cell Receptor Alpha/Delta Locus in Salmonids.zip
title_sort datasheet_1_profiling the t cell receptor alpha/delta locus in salmonids.zip
publishDate 2021
url https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.753960.s001
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/DataSheet_1_Profiling_the_T_Cell_Receptor_Alpha_Delta_Locus_in_Salmonids_zip/16826005
genre Atlantic salmon
Salmo salar
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
Salmo salar
op_relation doi:10.3389/fimmu.2021.753960.s001
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/DataSheet_1_Profiling_the_T_Cell_Receptor_Alpha_Delta_Locus_in_Salmonids_zip/16826005
op_rights CC BY 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.753960.s001
_version_ 1766362573196754944