Newborn and child-like molecular signatures in elderly stem from TCR shifts across the human lifespan. van de Sandt et. al.

Published: 10 August 2023| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/8jrbh6rgmx.1
Contributor:
Hayley McQuilten

Description

The files in this data repository contain the T cell receptor sequences described in the following study: Newborn and child-like molecular signatures in elderly stem from TCR shifts across the human lifespan. Nature Immunology, 2023. Carolien E van de Sandt, Thi H O Nguyen, Nicholas A Gherardin, Jeremy Chase Crawford, Jerome Samir, Anastasia A Minervina, Mikhail V Pogorelyy, Simone Rizzetto, Christopher Szeto, Jasveen Kaur, Nicole Ranson, Sabrina Sonda, Alice Harper, Samuel J Redmond, Hayley A McQuilten, Tejas Menon, Sneha Sant, Xiaoxiao Jia, Kate Pedrina, Theo Karapanagiotidis, Natalie Cain, Suellen Nicholson, Zhenjun Chen, Ratana Lim, E Bridie Clemens, Auda Eltahla, Nicole L La Gruta, Jane Crowe, Martha Lappas, Jamie Rossjohn, Dale I Godfrey, Paul G Thomas, Stephanie Gras, Katie L Flanagan, Fabio Luciani and Katherine Kedzierska.

Files

Institutions

Saint Jude Children's Research Hospital Department of Immunology, Monash University, University of Tasmania, Universiteit van Amsterdam, Victorian Infectious Diseases Reference Laboratory, The University of Melbourne, The Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity, La Trobe University, RMIT University, University of New South Wales, Cardiff University School of Medicine, Launceston General Hospital

Categories

Transcriptomics, Influenza Virus, Adult, Cytotoxic T-Cell, Elderly (Age Groups), Lifespan Population, Child, T Cell Receptor, Neonatal Infant, Single-Cell RNA Sequencing

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