T cell receptor clonotypes predict human leukocyte antigen allele carriage and antigen exposure history

Authors:

Hesham ElAbd, Aya K. H. Mahdy, Eike Matthias Wacker, Maria Gretsova, David Ellinghaus, Astrid Dempfle & Andre Franke

Year of publication:

2026

Volume:

9

Issue:

1

ISSN:

2399-3642

Journal (long):

Communications Biology

Journal (short):

Commun Biol

Impact factor:

5.1

Abstract:

Conventional T cells recognize peptides presented by the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) proteins through their T cell receptors (TCRs). Given that thousands of HLA proteins have been discovered, each presenting thousands of different peptides, decoding the cognate HLA protein of a TCR experimentally is a challenging task. To address this problem, we combined statistical learning methods with a unique dataset of paired T cell repertoires and HLA allotypes for 6,794 individuals. This enabled us to discover 34,206 T cell receptor alpha (TRA) and 891,564 beta (TRB) clonotypes that were associated with 175 unique HLA alleles. The identified clonotypes target prevalent infections, e.g. influenza, cytomegalovirus and Epstein-Barr virus. Utilizing these clonotypes, we develop statistical models that impute the carriership of common HLA alleles from the TRA- or the TRB- repertoire. In conclusion, the identified allele-associated clonotypes encode the HLA fingerprints and the antigenic exposure history of individuals and populations.

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