Age-related changes in major lymphocyte subsets were analyzed in 195 cynomolgus monkeys (Macaca fascicularis) aged from one month to 31 years. The percentages of CD20+ B cells in peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) decreased with age to five years of age, but after that, no significant change was observed. The percentages of CD16+ NK cells gradually increased during the first five years and reached the peak at from four to ten years of age, whereas the percentages of CD3+ T cells in PBL were relatively constant throughout the life. Among the T cells, the CD4+ CD8- T cells decreased, but CD4- CD8+ T cells increased within the first decade of life. We further analyzed the expressions of CD28 and CD29 molecules on T cells to determine the relation between age-related activation and phenotypic changes. Almost all CD4+ CD8- T cells (>90%) were CD28+ at all ages analyzed, but a clear age-related decrease in CD28 expression was demonstrated in CD4- CD8+ T cells during the first ten years. In the case of CD29 expression, age-related increases in CD29hi cells were apparent in both CD4+ CD8- and CD4- CD8+ T cells during the first ten years. The percentages of CD29hi cells, however, were higher in CD4- CD8+ T cells than in CD4+ CD8- T cells in all ages analyzed. These results indicated that the age-related changes in percentages of major lymphocyte subsets as well as in phenotypes of T cells might be related to the maturation of the immune system including an increase in memory cells in cynomolgus monkeys.
CITATION STYLE
Nam, K. H., Akari, H., Terao, K., Itagaki, S., & Yoshikawa, Y. (1998). Age-Related Changes in Major Lymphocyte Subsets in Cynomolgus Monkeys. Experimental Animals, 47(3), 159–166. https://doi.org/10.1538/expanim.47.159
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