Science
Revised Adaptive Immune Receptor Data in the Immune Epitope Database
Key Points
The Immune Epitope Database (IEDB, iedb.org) is a freely available resource that catalogs experimentally defined immune epitopes and - if available - the immune receptors that recognize them. Currently, the IEDB records ~185,000 T cell receptors and ~5,000 B cell receptors/antibodies with experimentally verified epitope specificity. Because these receptor data were manually curated from ~3,300 references spanning decades, nomenclature inconsistencies present challenges for computational...
The Immune Epitope Database (IEDB, iedb.org) is a freely available resource that catalogs experimentally defined immune epitopes and - if available - the immune receptors that recognize them. Currently, the IEDB records ~185,000 T cell receptors and ~5,000 B cell receptors/antibodies with experimentally verified epitope specificity. Because these receptor data were manually curated from ~3,300 references spanning decades, nomenclature inconsistencies present challenges for computational analyses and user queries. To support integrated analysis of the entire dataset, we revised the IEDB receptor data standardization and validation pipeline to flag and correct inaccuracies. Anomalous receptors from over 800 studies were flagged for re-curation. The updated receptor dataset shows greater conformity through consistent gene nomenclature formatting and harmonized CDR sequence delimitation. Taking advantage of the increased receptor data consistency, the IEDB web interface was expanded to include receptor search features directly on the homepage, support V/J gene and species options in the refined receptor search, and allow direct data export in the Adaptive Immune Receptor Repertoire (AIRR) format. We anticipate that the improved receptor data quality will simplify bioinformatics analyses, and facilitate integration of IEDB data into cross-repository data resources, such as the AIRR Knowledge Commons.