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Self-recognition drives the preferential accumulation of promiscuous CD4(+) T-cells in aged mice.
Elife. 2015 Jul 14;4:e05949. doi: 10.7554/eLife.05949
Deshpande NR, Parrish HL, Kuhns MS
Abstract:
T-cell recognition of self and foreign peptide antigens presented in major histocompatibility complex molecules (pMHC) is essential for life-long immunity. How the ability of the CD4(+) T-cell compartment to bind self- and foreign-pMHC changes over the lifespan remains a fundamental aspect of T-cell biology that is largely unexplored. We report that, while old mice (18-22 months) contain fewer CD4(+) T-cells compared with adults (8-12 weeks), those that remain have a higher intrinsic affinity for self-pMHC, as measured by CD5 expression. Old mice also have more cells that bind individual or multiple distinct foreign-pMHCs, and the fold increase in pMHC-binding populations is directly related to their CD5 levels. These data demonstrate that the CD4(+) T-cell compartment preferentially accumulates promiscuous constituents with age as a consequence of higher affinity T-cell receptor interactions with self-pMHC.
PMID: 26173205
Free Full-Text: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4501121/
Tags: autoimmunity, immune senescence, mice, thymus