4.5 Review

Impact of sepsis on CD4 T cell immunity

Journal

JOURNAL OF LEUKOCYTE BIOLOGY
Volume 96, Issue 5, Pages 767-777

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1189/jlb.5MR0114-067R

Keywords

apoptosis; lymphopenia; homeostatic proliferation; immune suppression

Funding

  1. University of Minnesota Center for Immunology Training Grant [T32 AI007313]
  2. Medical Scientist Training Program [T32 GM008244]
  3. American Heart Association Postdoctoral Fellowship
  4. U.S. National Institutes of Health [AI83286]
  5. U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Merit Review Award

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Sepsis remains the primary cause of death from infection in hospital patients, despite improvements in antibiotics and intensive-care practices. Patients who survive severe sepsis can display suppressed immune function, often manifested as an increased susceptibility to (and mortality from) nosocomial infections. Not only is there a significant reduction in the number of various immune cell populations during sepsis, but there is also decreased function in the remaining lymphocytes. Within the immune system, CD4 T cells are important players in the proper development of numerous cellular and humoral immune responses. Despite sufficient clinical evidence of CD4 T cell loss in septic patients of all ages, the impact of sepsis on CD4 T cell responses is not well understood. Recent findings suggest that CD4 T cell impairment is a multipronged problem that results from initial sepsis-induced cell loss. However, the subsequent lymphopenia-induced numerical recovery of the CD4 T cell compartment leads to intrinsic alterations in phenotype and effector function, reduced repertoire diversity, changes in the composition of naive antigenspecific CD4 T cell pools, and changes in the representation of different CD4 T cell subpopulations (e.g., increases in T-reg frequency). This review focuses on sepsis-induced alterations within the CD4 T cell compartment that influence the ability of the immune system to control secondary heterologous infections. The understanding of how sepsis affects CD4 T cells through their numerical loss and recovery, as well as function, is important in the development of future treatments designed to restore CD4 T cells to their presepsis state.

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