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- Title
The Future of Blood Testing Is the Immunome.
- Authors
Arnaout, Ramy A.; Prak, Eline T. Luning; Schwab, Nicholas; Rubelt, Florian; Arora, Rohit; Bashford-Rogers, Rachael; Breden, Felix; Bukhari, Syed Ahmad Chan; Corrie, Brian; Cowell, Lindsay G.; Efroni, Sol; Gooley, Christopher; Greiff, Victor; Heiden, Jason Vander; Koguchi, Yoshinobu; Langerak, Ton; Lim, Theam Soon; Prak, Eline Luning; Mariotti-Ferrandiz, Encarnita; Marquez, Susanna
- Abstract
It is increasingly clear that an extraordinarily diverse range of clinically important conditions—including infections, vaccinations, autoimmune diseases, transplants, transfusion reactions, aging, and cancers—leave telltale signatures in the millions of V(D)J-rearranged antibody and T cell receptor [TR per the Human Genome Organization (HUGO) nomenclature but more commonly known as TCR] genes collectively expressed by a person's B cells (antibodies) and T cells. We refer to these as the immunome. Because of its diversity and complexity, the immunome provides singular opportunities for advancing personalized medicine by serving as the substrate for a highly multiplexed, near-universal blood test. Here we discuss some of these opportunities, the current state of immunome-based diagnostics, and highlight some of the challenges involved. We conclude with a call to clinicians, researchers, and others to join efforts with the Adaptive Immune Receptor Repertoire Community (AIRR-C) to realize the diagnostic potential of the immunome.
- Subjects
BLOOD testing; MEDICAL personnel; T cell receptors; B cells; T cells
- Publication
Frontiers in Immunology, 2021, Vol 11, pN.PAG
- ISSN
1664-3224
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3389/fimmu.2021.626793