Distinct organization of adaptive immunity in the long-lived rodent Spalax galili

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Abstract

A balanced immune response is a cornerstone of healthy aging. Here, we uncover distinctive features of the long-lived blind mole-rat (Spalax spp.) adaptive immune system, relative to humans and mice. The T-cell repertoire remains diverse throughout the Spalax lifespan, suggesting a paucity of large long-lived clones of effector-memory T cells. Expression of master transcription factors of T-cell differentiation, as well as checkpoint and cytotoxicity genes, remains low as Spalax ages. The thymus shrinks as in mice and humans, while interleukin-7 and interleukin-7 receptor expression remains high, potentially reflecting the sustained homeostasis of naive T cells. With aging, immunoglobulin hypermutation level does not increase and the immunoglobulin-M repertoire remains diverse, suggesting shorter B-cell memory and sustained homeostasis of innate-like B cells. The Spalax adaptive immune system thus appears biased towards sustained functional and receptor diversity over specialized, long-lived effector-memory clones—a unique organizational strategy that potentially underlies this animal’s extraordinary longevity and healthy aging.

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Izraelson, M., Metsger, M., Davydov, A. N., Shagina, I. A., Dronina, M. A., Obraztsova, A. S., … Chudakov, D. M. (2021). Distinct organization of adaptive immunity in the long-lived rodent Spalax galili. Nature Aging, 1(2), 179–189. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43587-021-00029-3

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