Abstract
Aging is associated with suboptimal CD8 T cell responses to viral infections. It is not clear whether these poor responses are due to environmental influences or quantitative and qualitative changes in the pool of responding CD8 T cells. Our studies demonstrated several deleterious age-related changes in the pool of Ag-specific CD8 T cells that respond to infection. The majority of CD8 T cells from uninfected aged mice was CD44Hi and had increased expression of inhibitory receptors including PD1, LAG3, 2B4, and CD160. These aged CD44Hi CD8 T cells were transcriptionally similar to exhausted CD8 T cells found during chronic infections. In addition, the number of virus-specific precursors in aged mice prior to infection was decreased up to 10-fold, and many of these Ag-specific precursors had high expression of CD44 and PD1. Finally, TCR transgenic studies demonstrated that the CD44Hi Ag-specific CD8 T cells from unimmunized aged and young mice were qualitatively inferior compared with CD44Lo CD8 T cells from aged or young donors. Thus, a decrease in precursor frequency as well as qualitative changes of CD8 T cells during aging are directly related to impaired immunity.
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CITATION STYLE
Decman, V., Laidlaw, B. J., Doering, T. A., Leng, J., Ertl, H. C. J., Goldstein, D. R., & Wherry, E. J. (2012). Defective CD8 T Cell Responses in Aged Mice Are Due to Quantitative and Qualitative Changes in Virus-Specific Precursors. The Journal of Immunology, 188(4), 1933–1941. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1101098
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