Publication | Open Access
The dynamics and longevity of circulating CD4+ memory T cells depend on cell age and not the chronological age of the host
11
Citations
35
References
2024
Year
Systems BiologyChronological AgeLongevityImmune Cell DevelopmentT CellsImmunologyCell AgeT-regulatory CellAutoimmunityDevelopmental ImmunologyCd4 T Cell ResponsesCentral MemoryImmunotherapyMedicineCell BiologyImmunological MemoryMathematical Models
Quantifying the kinetics with which memory T cell populations are generated and maintained is essential for identifying the determinants of the duration of immunity. The quality and persistence of circulating CD4 effector memory (TEM) and central memory (TCM) T cells in mice appear to shift with age, but it is unclear whether these changes are driven by the aging host environment, by cell age effects, or both. Here, we address these issues by combining DNA labelling methods, established fate-mapping systems, a novel reporter mouse strain, and mathematical models. Together, these allow us to quantify the dynamics of both young and established circulating memory CD4 T cell subsets, within both young and old mice. We show that that these cells and their descendents become more persistent the longer they reside within the TCM and TEM pools. This behaviour may limit memory CD4 T cell diversity by skewing TCR repertoires towards clones generated early in life, but may also compensate for functional defects in new memory cells generated in old age.
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