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Thymic function and T cell parameters in a natural human experimental model of seasonal infectious diseases and nutritional burden

BACKGROUND: The study exploits a natural human experimental model of subsistence farmers experiencing chronic and seasonally modified food shortages and infectious burden. Two seasons existed, one of increased deprivation and infections (Jul-Dec), another of abundance and low infections (Jan-Jun); r...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ngom, Pa T, Solon, Juan, Moore, Sophie E, Morgan, Gareth, Prentice, Andrew M, Aspinall, Richard
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3125341/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21676219
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1423-0127-18-41
Descripción
Sumario:BACKGROUND: The study exploits a natural human experimental model of subsistence farmers experiencing chronic and seasonally modified food shortages and infectious burden. Two seasons existed, one of increased deprivation and infections (Jul-Dec), another of abundance and low infections (Jan-Jun); referred to as the hungry/high infection and harvest/low infection seasons respectively. Prior analysis showed a 10-fold excess in infectious disease associated mortality in young adults born in the hungry/high infection versus harvest/low infection season, and reduced thymic output and T cell counts in infancy. Here we report findings on the role of early life stressors as contributors to the onset of T cell immunological defects in later life. METHODS: We hypothesised that season of birth effects on thymic function and T cell immunity would be detectable in young adults since Kaplan-Meier survival curves indicated this to be the time of greatest mortality divergence. T cell subset analyses by flow-cytometry, sjTRECs, TCRVβ repertoire and telomere length by PCR, were performed on samples from 60 males (18-23 y) selected to represent births in the hungry/high infection and harvest/low infection RESULTS: Total lymphocyte counts were normal and did not differ by birth season. CD3(+ )and CD4(+ )but not CD8(+ )counts were lower for those born during the hungry/high infection season. CD8(+ )telomere length also tended to be shorter. Overall, CD8(+ )TCRVβ repertoire skewing was observed with 'public' expressions and deletions seen in TCRVβ12/22 and TCRVβ24, respectively but no apparent effect of birth season. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that, although thymic function was unchanged, the CD4(+ )and CD3(+ )counts, and CD8(+ )telomere length results suggested that aspects of adult T cell immunity were under the influence of early life stressors. The endemicity of CMV and HBV suggested that chronic infections may modulate immunity through T cell repertoire development. The overall implications being that, this population is at an elevated risk of premature immunosenescence possibly driven by a combination of nutritional and infectious burden.