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| Content Provider | frontiers |
|---|---|
| Author | Maniangou, Bercelin Legrand, Nolwenn Alizadeh, Mehdi Guyet, Ulysse Willem, Catherine David, Gaëlle Charpentier, Eric Walencik, Alexandre Retière, Christelle Gagne, Katia |
| Abstract | The impact of Natural Killer (NK) cell alloreactivity on Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation (HSCT) outcome is still debated due to the complexity of graft parameters, HLA class I environment, the nature of Killer Immunoglobulin-like Receptor (KIR)/KIR ligand genetic combinations studied and KIR+ NK cell repertoire size. KIR genes are known to be polymorphic in terms of gene content, copy number variation and number of alleles. These allelic polymorphisms may impact both the phenotype and function of KIR+ NK cells. We, therefore, speculate that polymorphisms may alter donor KIR+ NK cell phenotype/function thus modulating post-HSCT KIR+ NK cell alloreactivity. To investigate KIR allele polymorphisms of all KIR genes, we developed a Next-Generation-Sequencing (NGS) technology on a MiSeq platform. To ensure the reliability and specificity of our method, genomic DNA from well-characterized cell lines were used, high-resolution KIR typing results obtained were then compared to those previously reported. Two different bioinformatics pipelines were used allowing the attribution of sequencing reads to specific KIR genes and the assignment of KIR alleles for each KIR gene. Our results demonstrated successful long-range KIR gene amplifications of all reference samples using intergenic KIR primers. The alignment of reads to the Human genome reference (hg19) using BiRD pipeline or visualization of data using Profiler software demonstrated that all KIR genes were completely sequenced with a sufficient read depth (mean 317X for all loci) and a high percentage of mapping (mean 93% for all loci). Comparison of high-resolution KIR typing obtained to those published data using exome capture resulted in a reported concordance rate of 95% for centromeric and telomeric KIR genes. Overall, our results suggest that NGS can be used to investigate the broad KIR allelic polymorphism. Hence, these data improve our knowledge, not only on KIR+ NK cell alloreactivity in HSCT, but also on the role of KIR+ NK cell populations in control of viral infections and diseases. |
| ISSN | 16643224 |
| DOI | 10.3389/fimmu.2017.00547 |
| Volume Number | 8 |
| Journal | Frontiers in Immunology |
| Language | English |
| Publisher Date | 2017-05-19 |
| Access Restriction | Open |
| Subject Keyword | Next-Generation-Sequencing High resolution KIR typing Allele polymorphism NK cells International Histocompatibility Workshop DNA samples |
| Content Type | Text |
| Resource Type | Article |
| Subject | Immunology and Allergy Immunology |
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