Unexpected expansions of CD8-bearing cells in old mice.

  • Callahan J
  • Kappler J
  • Marrack P
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Abstract

As mice age, spontaneous changes occur in the receptor repertoire of their T cells. The receptor repertoire of CD4+ T cells does not change with age. By contrast, however, the percentage of alpha  beta+, CD8+ T cells bearing particular V elements varies considerably between individual aged mice, although it is remarkably consistent among individual young animals within a given strain. Changes of receptor V element use among CD8+ T cells in individual mice are unpredictable. However, when a large number of mice of the same strain is analyzed, strain-specific trends in V element skewing are found. Old C3H.SW and B10.BR mice have mono- or oligoclonal expansions of CD8+ T cells. These expansions of peripheral CD8+ T cells with age are probably due to deregulation of proliferation of individual CD8+ T cells after recognition of viral or environmental Ag, accompanied, perhaps, by partial transformation of particular T cell clones. Another phenomenon documented herein is the fact that the CD4/CD8 ratio drops steadily as a function of age. Shifts in CD4/CD8 ratio were not due to increased numbers of CD8+ T cells in spleen and lymph nodes, rather the CD4+ T cells disappeared from aging mice faster than CD8+ T cells.

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Callahan, J. E., Kappler, J. W., & Marrack, P. (1993). Unexpected expansions of CD8-bearing cells in old mice. The Journal of Immunology, 151(12), 6657–6669. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.151.12.6657

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