Power laws and extreme values in antibody repertoires

POSTER

Abstract

Evolution by natural selection involves the succession of three steps: mutations, selection and proliferation. We are interested in describing and characterizing the result of selection over a population of many variants. After selection, this population will be dominated by the few best variants, with highest propensity to be selected, or highest ``selectivity.'' We ask the following question: how is the selectivity of the best variants distributed in the population? Extreme value theory, which characterizes the extreme tail of probability distributions in terms of a few universality class, has been proposed to describe it. To test this proposition and identify the relevant universality class, we performed quantitative {\it in vitro} experimental selections of libraries of $> 10^5$ antibodies using the technique of phage display. Data obtained by high-throughput sequencing allows us to fit the selectivity distribution over more than two decades. In most experiments, the results show a striking power law for the selectivity distribution of the top antibodies, consistent with extreme value theory.

Authors

  • Sebastien Boyer

    • Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire de Physique - CNRS \& Universit\'e Grenoble Alpes
  • Dipanwita Biswas

    • Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire de Physique - CNRS \& Universit\'e Grenoble Alpes
  • Natale Scaramozzino

    • Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire de Physique - CNRS \& Universit\'e Grenoble Alpes
  • Ananda Soshee Kumar

    • Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire de Physique - CNRS \& Universit\'e Grenoble Alpes
  • Cl\'ement Nizak

    • ESPCI ParisTech/CNRS
  • Olivier Rivoire

    • Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire de Physique - CNRS \& Universit\'e Grenoble Alpes