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Early Priming Minimizes the Age-Related Immune Compromise of CD8(+) T Cell Diversity and Function

The elderly are particularly susceptible to influenza A virus infections, with increased occurrence, disease severity and reduced vaccine efficacy attributed to declining immunity. Experimentally, the age-dependent decline in influenza-specific CD8(+) T cell responsiveness reflects both functional c...

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Autores principales: Valkenburg, Sophie A., Venturi, Vanessa, Dang, Thurston H. Y., Bird, Nicola L., Doherty, Peter C., Turner, Stephen J., Davenport, Miles P., Kedzierska, Katherine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3285595/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22383879
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1002544
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author Valkenburg, Sophie A.
Venturi, Vanessa
Dang, Thurston H. Y.
Bird, Nicola L.
Doherty, Peter C.
Turner, Stephen J.
Davenport, Miles P.
Kedzierska, Katherine
author_facet Valkenburg, Sophie A.
Venturi, Vanessa
Dang, Thurston H. Y.
Bird, Nicola L.
Doherty, Peter C.
Turner, Stephen J.
Davenport, Miles P.
Kedzierska, Katherine
author_sort Valkenburg, Sophie A.
collection PubMed
description The elderly are particularly susceptible to influenza A virus infections, with increased occurrence, disease severity and reduced vaccine efficacy attributed to declining immunity. Experimentally, the age-dependent decline in influenza-specific CD8(+) T cell responsiveness reflects both functional compromise and the emergence of ‘repertoire holes’ arising from the loss of low frequency clonotypes. In this study, we asked whether early priming limits the time-related attrition of immune competence. Though primary responses in aged mice were compromised, animals vaccinated at 6 weeks then challenged >20 months later had T-cell responses that were normal in magnitude. Both functional quality and the persistence of ‘preferred’ TCR clonotypes that expand in a characteristic immunodominance hierarchy were maintained following early priming. Similar to the early priming, vaccination at 22 months followed by challenge retained a response magnitude equivalent to young mice. However, late priming resulted in reduced TCRβ diversity in comparison with vaccination earlier in life. Thus, early priming was critical to maintaining individual and population-wide TCRβ diversity. In summary, early exposure leads to the long-term maintenance of memory T cells and thus preserves optimal, influenza-specific CD8(+) T-cell responsiveness and protects against the age-related attrition of naïve T-cell precursors. Our study supports development of vaccines that prime CD8(+) T-cells early in life to elicit the broadest possible spectrum of CD8(+) T-cell memory and preserve the magnitude, functionality and TCR usage of responding populations. In addition, our study provides the most comprehensive analysis of the aged (primary, secondary primed-early and secondary primed-late) TCR repertoires published to date.
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spelling pubmed-32855952012-03-01 Early Priming Minimizes the Age-Related Immune Compromise of CD8(+) T Cell Diversity and Function Valkenburg, Sophie A. Venturi, Vanessa Dang, Thurston H. Y. Bird, Nicola L. Doherty, Peter C. Turner, Stephen J. Davenport, Miles P. Kedzierska, Katherine PLoS Pathog Research Article The elderly are particularly susceptible to influenza A virus infections, with increased occurrence, disease severity and reduced vaccine efficacy attributed to declining immunity. Experimentally, the age-dependent decline in influenza-specific CD8(+) T cell responsiveness reflects both functional compromise and the emergence of ‘repertoire holes’ arising from the loss of low frequency clonotypes. In this study, we asked whether early priming limits the time-related attrition of immune competence. Though primary responses in aged mice were compromised, animals vaccinated at 6 weeks then challenged >20 months later had T-cell responses that were normal in magnitude. Both functional quality and the persistence of ‘preferred’ TCR clonotypes that expand in a characteristic immunodominance hierarchy were maintained following early priming. Similar to the early priming, vaccination at 22 months followed by challenge retained a response magnitude equivalent to young mice. However, late priming resulted in reduced TCRβ diversity in comparison with vaccination earlier in life. Thus, early priming was critical to maintaining individual and population-wide TCRβ diversity. In summary, early exposure leads to the long-term maintenance of memory T cells and thus preserves optimal, influenza-specific CD8(+) T-cell responsiveness and protects against the age-related attrition of naïve T-cell precursors. Our study supports development of vaccines that prime CD8(+) T-cells early in life to elicit the broadest possible spectrum of CD8(+) T-cell memory and preserve the magnitude, functionality and TCR usage of responding populations. In addition, our study provides the most comprehensive analysis of the aged (primary, secondary primed-early and secondary primed-late) TCR repertoires published to date. Public Library of Science 2012-02-23 /pmc/articles/PMC3285595/ /pubmed/22383879 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1002544 Text en Valkenburg et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Valkenburg, Sophie A.
Venturi, Vanessa
Dang, Thurston H. Y.
Bird, Nicola L.
Doherty, Peter C.
Turner, Stephen J.
Davenport, Miles P.
Kedzierska, Katherine
Early Priming Minimizes the Age-Related Immune Compromise of CD8(+) T Cell Diversity and Function
title Early Priming Minimizes the Age-Related Immune Compromise of CD8(+) T Cell Diversity and Function
title_full Early Priming Minimizes the Age-Related Immune Compromise of CD8(+) T Cell Diversity and Function
title_fullStr Early Priming Minimizes the Age-Related Immune Compromise of CD8(+) T Cell Diversity and Function
title_full_unstemmed Early Priming Minimizes the Age-Related Immune Compromise of CD8(+) T Cell Diversity and Function
title_short Early Priming Minimizes the Age-Related Immune Compromise of CD8(+) T Cell Diversity and Function
title_sort early priming minimizes the age-related immune compromise of cd8(+) t cell diversity and function
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3285595/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22383879
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1002544
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