Defective T Cell Priming Associated with Aging Can Be Rescued by Signaling Through 4-1BB (CD137)

  • Bansal-Pakala P
  • Croft M
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Abstract

Aging is associated with an increased susceptibility to infectious agents and correlates with a decreased ability to mount an immune response. It has been postulated that the major defect is related to a reduced capacity of an aged T cell to proliferate and to survive after encounter with Ag. This is similar to the phenotype associated with T cell tolerance in young adults. In this study, we determined whether targeting 4-1BB (CD137), a member of the TNFR family implicated in providing expansion and survival signals to T cells, can rescue defective priming in aged and tolerized animals. Agonist Abs to 4-1BB injected in vivo were capable of preventing CD4 T cell tolerance to soluble peptide in young mice. Moreover, anti-4-1BB rescued defective priming of aged TCR transgenic CD4 T cells responding to peptide Ag in a young host, and as importantly, anti-4-1BB completely restored T cell priming to protein Ag in nontransgenic aged mice. These studies demonstrate that 4-1BB, and potentially other costimulatory members of the TNFR family, are targets for therapies aimed at augmenting weak T cell responses in elderly immunocompromised individuals.

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APA

Bansal-Pakala, P., & Croft, M. (2002). Defective T Cell Priming Associated with Aging Can Be Rescued by Signaling Through 4-1BB (CD137). The Journal of Immunology, 169(9), 5005–5009. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.169.9.5005

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