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Dive into the research topics where Jacob Glanville is active.

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Featured researches published by Jacob Glanville.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Precise determination of the diversity of a combinatorial antibody library gives insight into the human immunoglobulin repertoire

Jacob Glanville; Wenwu Zhai; Jan Berka; Dilduz Telman; Gabriella Huerta; Gautam R. Mehta; Irene Ni; Li Mei; Purnima Sundar; Giles M. R. Day; David Cox; Arvind Rajpal; Jaume Pons

Antibody repertoire diversity, potentially as high as 1011 unique molecules in a single individual, confounds characterization by conventional sequence analyses. In this study, we present a general method for assessing human antibody sequence diversity displayed on phage using massively parallel pyrosequencing, a novel application of Kabat column-labeled profile Hidden Markov Models, and translated complementarity determining region (CDR) capture-recapture analysis. Pyrosequencing of domain amplicon and RCA PCR products generated 1.5 × 106 reads, including more than 1.9 × 105 high quality, full-length sequences of antibody variable fragment (Fv) variable domains. Novel methods for germline and CDR classification and fine characterization of sequence diversity in the 6 CDRs are presented. Diverse germline contributions to the repertoire with random heavy and light chain pairing are observed. All germline families were found to be represented in 1.7 × 104 sequences obtained from repeated panning of the library. While the most variable CDR (CDR-H3) presents significant length and sequence variability, we find a substantial contribution to total diversity from somatically mutated germline encoded CDRs 1 and 2. Using a capture-recapture method, the total diversity of the antibody library obtained from a human donor Immunoglobulin M (IgM) pool was determined to be at least 3.5 × 1010. The results provide insights into the role of IgM diversification, display library construction, and productive germline usages in antibody libraries and the humoral repertoire.


Cell | 2014

Deconstructing the Peptide-MHC Specificity of T Cell Recognition.

Michael E. Birnbaum; Juan L. Mendoza; Dhruv K. Sethi; Shen Dong; Jacob Glanville; Jessica Dobbins; Engin Özkan; Mark M. Davis; Kai W. Wucherpfennig; K. Christopher Garcia

In order to survey a universe of major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-presented peptide antigens whose numbers greatly exceed the diversity of the T cell repertoire, T cell receptors (TCRs) are thought to be cross-reactive. However, the nature and extent of TCR cross-reactivity has not been conclusively measured experimentally. We developed a system to identify MHC-presented peptide ligands by combining TCR selection of highly diverse yeast-displayed peptide-MHC libraries with deep sequencing. Although we identified hundreds of peptides reactive with each of five different mouse and human TCRs, the selected peptides possessed TCR recognition motifs that bore a close resemblance to their known antigens. This structural conservation of the TCR interaction surface allowed us to exploit deep-sequencing information to computationally identify activating microbial and self-ligands for human autoimmune TCRs. The mechanistic basis of TCR cross-reactivity described here enables effective surveillance of diverse self and foreign antigens without necessitating degenerate recognition of nonhomologous peptides.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Diversity and clonal selection in the human T-cell repertoire

Qian Qi; Yi Liu; Yong Cheng; Jacob Glanville; David D. Zhang; Ji-Yeun Lee; Richard A. Olshen; Cornelia M. Weyand; Scott D. Boyd; Jörg J. Goronzy

Significance A decline in the diversity of the T-cell receptor repertoire owing to thymic involution has been implicated as causing defective immune responses in the elderly. By applying next-generation sequencing of replicate TCRB libraries from highly purified T-cell subsets, and using nonparametric statistical analysis, we obtain estimates of repertoire richness in the young adult that are higher than previously reported. Although contracting with age, the repertoire remains highly diverse. These data challenge the paradigm that thymic rejuvenation is needed to maintain diversity and prevent immune incompetence in the elderly. However, we observe an increasing inequality of clonal sizes with age even among naïve T cells. This clonal selection could result in biased and possibly autoreactive immune responses. T-cell receptor (TCR) diversity, a prerequisite for immune system recognition of the universe of foreign antigens, is generated in the first two decades of life in the thymus and then persists to an unknown extent through life via homeostatic proliferation of naïve T cells. We have used next-generation sequencing and nonparametric statistical analysis to estimate a lower bound for the total number of different TCR beta (TCRB) sequences in human repertoires. We arrived at surprisingly high minimal estimates of 100 million unique TCRB sequences in naïve CD4 and CD8 T-cell repertoires of young adults. Naïve repertoire richness modestly declined two- to fivefold in healthy elderly. Repertoire richness contraction with age was even less pronounced for memory CD4 and CD8 T cells. In contrast, age had a major impact on the inequality of clonal sizes, as estimated by a modified Gini–Simpson index clonality score. In particular, large naïve T-cell clones that were distinct from memory clones were found in the repertoires of elderly individuals, indicating uneven homeostatic proliferation without development of a memory cell phenotype. Our results suggest that a highly diverse repertoire is maintained despite thymic involution; however, peripheral fitness selection of T cells leads to repertoire perturbations that can influence the immune response in the elderly.


Nature Biotechnology | 2014

Linking T-cell receptor sequence to functional phenotype at the single-cell level

Arnold Han; Jacob Glanville; Leo Hansmann; Mark M. Davis

Although each T lymphocyte expresses a T-cell receptor (TCR) that recognizes cognate antigen and controls T-cell activation, different T cells bearing the same TCR can be functionally distinct. Each TCR is a heterodimer, and both α- and β-chains contribute to determining TCR antigen specificity. Here we present a methodology enabling integration of information about TCR specificity with information about T cell function. This method involves sequencing of TCRα and TCRβ genes, and amplifying functional genes characteristic of different T cell subsets, in single T cells. Because this approach retains information about individual TCRα-TCRβ pairs, TCRs of interest can be expressed and used in functional studies, for antigen discovery, or in therapeutic applications. We apply this approach to study the clonal ancestry and differentiation of T lymphocytes infiltrating a human colorectal carcinoma.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2012

B cell exchange across the blood-brain barrier in multiple sclerosis

H.-Christian von Büdingen; Tracy Chia-Chien Kuo; Marina Sirota; Christopher van Belle; Leonard Apeltsin; Jacob Glanville; Bruce Anthony Campbell Cree; Pierre-Antoine Gourraud; Amy Schwartzburg; Gabriella Huerta; Dilduz Telman; Purnima Sundar; Tyler Casey; D. R. Cox; Stephen L. Hauser

In multiple sclerosis (MS) pathogenic B cells likely act on both sides of the blood-brain barrier (BBB). However, it is unclear whether antigen-experienced B cells are shared between the CNS and the peripheral blood (PB) compartments. We applied deep repertoire sequencing of IgG heavy chain variable region genes (IgG-VH) in paired cerebrospinal fluid and PB samples from patients with MS and other neurological diseases to identify related B cells that are common to both compartments. For the first time to our knowledge, we found that a restricted pool of clonally related B cells participated in robust bidirectional exchange across the BBB. Some clusters of related IgG-VH appeared to have undergone active diversification primarily in the CNS, while others have undergone active diversification in the periphery or in both compartments in parallel. B cells are strong candidates for autoimmune effector cells in MS, and these findings suggest that CNS-directed autoimmunity may be triggered and supported on both sides of the BBB. These data also provide a powerful approach to identify and monitor B cells in the PB that correspond to clonally amplified populations in the CNS in MS and other inflammatory states.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2014

Human Responses to Influenza Vaccination Show Seroconversion Signatures and Convergent Antibody Rearrangements

Katherine J. L. Jackson; Yi Liu; Krishna M. Roskin; Jacob Glanville; Ramona A. Hoh; Katie Seo; Eleanor L. Marshall; Thaddeus C. Gurley; M. Anthony Moody; Barton F. Haynes; Emmanuel B. Walter; Hua-Xin Liao; Randy A. Albrecht; Adolfo García-Sastre; Javier Chaparro-Riggers; Arvind Rajpal; Jaume Pons; Birgitte B. Simen; Bozena Hanczaruk; Cornelia L. Dekker; Jonathan Laserson; Daphne Koller; Mark M. Davis; Andrew Fire; Scott D. Boyd

B cells produce a diverse antibody repertoire by undergoing gene rearrangements. Pathogen exposure induces the clonal expansion of B cells expressing antibodies that can bind the infectious agent. To assess human B cell responses to trivalent seasonal influenza and monovalent pandemic H1N1 vaccination, we sequenced gene rearrangements encoding the immunoglobulin heavy chain, a major determinant of epitope recognition. The magnitude of B cell clonal expansions correlates with an individuals secreted antibody response to the vaccine, and the expanded clones are enriched with those expressing influenza-specific monoclonal antibodies. Additionally, B cell responses to pandemic influenza H1N1 vaccination and infection in different people show a prominent family of convergent antibody heavy chain gene rearrangements specific to influenza antigens. These results indicate that microbes can induce specific signatures of immunoglobulin gene rearrangements and that pathogen exposure can potentially be assessed from B cell repertoires.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Naive antibody gene-segment frequencies are heritable and unaltered by chronic lymphocyte ablation.

Jacob Glanville; Tracy Chia-Chien Kuo; H.-Christian von Büdingen; Lin Guey; Jan Berka; Purnima Sundar; Gabriella Huerta; Gautam R. Mehta; Jorge R. Oksenberg; Stephen L. Hauser; D. R. Cox; Arvind Rajpal; Jaume Pons

A diverse antibody repertoire is essential for an effective adaptive immune response to novel molecular surfaces. Although past studies have observed common patterns of V-segment use, as well as variation in V-segment use between individuals, the relative contributions to variance from genetics, disease, age, and environment have remained unclear. Using high-throughput sequence analysis of monozygotic twins, we show that variation in naive VH and DH segment use is strongly determined by an individuals germ-line genetic background. The inherited segment-use profiles are resilient to differential environmental exposure, disease processes, and chronic lymphocyte depletion therapy. Signatures of the inherited profiles were observed in class switched germ-line use of each individual. However, despite heritable segment use, the rearranged complementarity-determining region-H3 repertoires remained highly specific to the individual. As it has been previously demonstrated that certain V-segments exhibit biased representation in autoimmunity, lymphoma, and viral infection, we anticipate our findings may provide a unique mechanism for stratifying individual risk profiles in specific diseases.


Nature Biotechnology | 2015

A catalog of the mouse gut metagenome.

Liang Xiao; Qiang Feng; Suisha Liang; Si Brask Sonne; Zhongkui Xia; Xinmin Qiu; Xiaoping Li; Hua Long; Jianfeng Zhang; Dongya Zhang; Chuan Liu; Zhiwei Fang; Joyce Chou; Jacob Glanville; Qin Hao; Dorota Ewa Kotowska; Camilla Colding; Tine Rask Licht; Donghai Wu; Jun Yu; Joseph Jao Yiu Sung; Qiaoyi Liang; Junhua Li; Huijue Jia; Zhou Lan; Valentina Tremaroli; Piotr Dworzynski; H. Bjørn Nielsen; Fredrik Bäckhed; Joël Doré

We established a catalog of the mouse gut metagenome comprising ∼2.6 million nonredundant genes by sequencing DNA from fecal samples of 184 mice. To secure high microbiome diversity, we used mouse strains of diverse genetic backgrounds, from different providers, kept in different housing laboratories and fed either a low-fat or high-fat diet. Similar to the human gut microbiome, >99% of the cataloged genes are bacterial. We identified 541 metagenomic species and defined a core set of 26 metagenomic species found in 95% of the mice. The mouse gut microbiome is functionally similar to its human counterpart, with 95.2% of its Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) orthologous groups in common. However, only 4.0% of the mouse gut microbial genes were shared (95% identity, 90% coverage) with those of the human gut microbiome. This catalog provides a useful reference for future studies.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Dietary gluten triggers concomitant activation of CD4+ and CD8+ αβ T cells and γδ T cells in celiac disease

Arnold Han; Evan W. Newell; Jacob Glanville; Nielsen Fernandez-Becker; Chaitan Khosla; Yueh-hsiu Chien; Mark M. Davis

Celiac disease is an intestinal autoimmune disease driven by dietary gluten and gluten-specific CD4+ T-cell responses. In celiac patients on a gluten-free diet, exposure to gluten induces the appearance of gluten-specific CD4+ T cells with gut-homing potential in the peripheral blood. Here we show that gluten exposure also induces the appearance of activated, gut-homing CD8+ αβ and γδ T cells in the peripheral blood. Single-cell T-cell receptor sequence analysis indicates that both of these cell populations have highly focused T-cell receptor repertoires, indicating that their induction is antigen-driven. These results reveal a previously unappreciated role of antigen in the induction of CD8+ αβ and γδ T cells in celiac disease and demonstrate a coordinated response by all three of the major types of T cells. More broadly, these responses may parallel adaptive immune responses to viral pathogens and other systemic autoimmune diseases.


Nature | 2017

Identifying specificity groups in the T cell receptor repertoire

Jacob Glanville; Huang Huang; Allison Nau; Olivia Hatton; Lisa E. Wagar; Florian Rubelt; Xuhuai Ji; Arnold Han; Sheri M. Krams; Christina Pettus; Nikhil Haas; Cecilia S. Lindestam Arlehamn; Alessandro Sette; Scott D. Boyd; Thomas J. Scriba; Olivia M. Martinez; Mark M. Davis

T cell receptor (TCR) sequences are very diverse, with many more possible sequence combinations than T cells in any one individual. Here we define the minimal requirements for TCR antigen specificity, through an analysis of TCR sequences using a panel of peptide and major histocompatibility complex (pMHC)-tetramer-sorted cells and structural data. From this analysis we developed an algorithm that we term GLIPH (grouping of lymphocyte interactions by paratope hotspots) to cluster TCRs with a high probability of sharing specificity owing to both conserved motifs and global similarity of complementarity-determining region 3 (CDR3) sequences. We show that GLIPH can reliably group TCRs of common specificity from different donors, and that conserved CDR3 motifs help to define the TCR clusters that are often contact points with the antigenic peptides. As an independent validation, we analysed 5,711 TCRβ chain sequences from reactive CD4 T cells from 22 individuals with latent Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection. We found 141 TCR specificity groups, including 16 distinct groups containing TCRs from multiple individuals. These TCR groups typically shared HLA alleles, allowing prediction of the likely HLA restriction, and a large number of M. tuberculosis T cell epitopes enabled us to identify pMHC ligands for all five of the groups tested. Mutagenesis and de novo TCR design confirmed that the GLIPH-identified motifs were critical and sufficient for shared-antigen recognition. Thus the GLIPH algorithm can analyse large numbers of TCR sequences and define TCR specificity groups shared by TCRs and individuals, which should greatly accelerate the analysis of T cell responses and expedite the identification of specific ligands.

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Arvind Rajpal

University of California

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Purnima Sundar

University of California

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