4.5 Article

Neonates harbour highly active γδ T cells with selective impairments in preterm infants

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 39, Issue 7, Pages 1794-1806

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/eji.200939222

Keywords

Neonate immunity; gamma delta T cells; Toll-like receptors

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH-NIAID [RO161799]
  2. Wellcome Trust
  3. Biomedical Research Centre of Guy's and St Thomas' Hospital and King's College
  4. Medical Research Council [G0600698B] Funding Source: researchfish

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Acknowledgement of the breadth of T-cell pleiotropy has provoked increasing interest in the degree to which functional responsiveness is elicited by environmental cues versus differentiation. This is particularly relevant for young animals requiring rapid responses to acute environmental exposure. In young mice, gamma delta T cells are disproportionately important for immuno-protection. To examine the situation in humans, we compared populations and clones of T cells from term and preterm babies, and adults. By comparison with alpha beta T cells, neonate-derived gamma delta cells show stronger, pleiotropic functional responsiveness, and lack signatory deficits in IFN-gamma production. Emphasising the acquisition of functional competence in utero, IFN-gamma was produced by gamma delta cells sampled from premature births, and, although one month's post-partum environmental exposure invariably increased their TNF-alpha production, it had no consistent effect on IFN-gamma or IL-2. In sum, gamma delta cells seem well positioned at birth to contribute to immuno-protection and immuno-regulation, possibly compensating for selective immaturity in the alpha beta compartment. With regard to the susceptibilities of preterm. babies to viral infection, gamma delta cells from preterm neonates were commonly impaired in Toll-like receptor-3 and -7 expression and compared with cells from term babies failed to optimise cytokine production in response to coincident TCR and TLR agonists.

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