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Hallmarks of the aging T-cell system

Journal

FEBS JOURNAL
Volume 288, Issue 24, Pages 7123-7142

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/febs.15770

Keywords

adaptive immunity; cellular senescence; immunosenescence; T‐ cell aging; T‐ cell differentiation; T‐ cell homeostasis

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 AR042527, R01 HL117913, R01 AI108906, R01 HL142068, P01 HL129941, R01 AI108891, R01 AG045779, U19 AI057266, R01 AI129191]

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The adaptive immune system faces challenges in generating short-lived effector T cells and long-lived memory cells. Immune aging leads to decreased immune competence, but interventions can improve immune responses in older adults.
The adaptive immune system has the enormous challenge to protect the host through the generation and differentiation of pathogen-specific short-lived effector T cells while in parallel developing long-lived memory cells to control future encounters with the same pathogen. A complex regulatory network is needed to preserve a population of naive cells over lifetime that exhibit sufficient diversity of antigen receptors to respond to new antigens, while also sustaining immune memory. In parallel, cells need to maintain their proliferative potential and the plasticity to differentiate into different functional lineages. Initial signs of waning immune competence emerge after 50 years of age, with increasing clinical relevance in the 7th-10th decade of life. Morbidity and mortality from infections increase, as drastically exemplified by the current COVID-19 pandemic. Many vaccines, such as for the influenza virus, are poorly effective to generate protective immunity in older individuals. Age-associated changes occur at the level of the T-cell population as well as the functionality of its cellular constituents. The system highly relies on the self-renewal of naive and memory T cells, which is robust but eventually fails. Genetic and epigenetic modifications contribute to functional differences in responsiveness and differentiation potential. To some extent, these changes arise from defective maintenance; to some, they represent successful, but not universally beneficial adaptations to the aging host. Interventions that can compensate for the age-related defects and improve immune responses in older adults are increasingly within reach.

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