| Literature DB >> 27933066 |
Joshua J Michel1, Patricia Griffin1, Abbe N Vallejo2.
Abstract
The fundamental challenge of aging and long-term survivorship is maintenance of functional independence and compression of morbidity despite a life history of disease. Inasmuch as immunity is a determinant of individual health and fitness, unraveling novel mechanisms of immune homeostasis in late life is of paramount interest. Comparative studies of young and old persons have documented age-related atrophy of the thymus, the contraction of diversity of the T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire, and the intrinsic inefficiency of classical TCR signaling in aged T cells. However, the elderly have highly heterogeneous health phenotypes. Studies of defined populations of persons aged 75 and older have led to the recognition of successful aging, a distinct physiologic construct characterized by high physical and cognitive functioning without measurable disability. Significantly, successful agers have a unique T cell repertoire; namely, the dominance of highly oligoclonal αβT cells expressing a diverse array of receptors normally expressed by NK cells. Despite their properties of cell senescence, these unusual NK-like T cells are functionally active effectors that do not require engagement of their clonotypic TCR. Thus, NK-like T cells represent a beneficial remodeling of the immune repertoire with advancing age, consistent with the concept of immune plasticity. Significantly, certain subsets are predictors of physical/cognitive performance among older adults. Further understanding of the roles of these NK-like T cells to host defense, and how they integrate with other physiologic domains of function are new frontiers for investigation in Aging Biology. Such pursuits will require a research paradigm shift from the usual young-versus-old comparison to the analysis of defined elderly populations. These endeavors may also pave way to age-appropriate, group-targeted immune interventions for the growing elderly population.Entities:
Keywords: CD16; CD56; NKG2D; TCR-independent; cell senescence; functional performance; immune remodeling; plasticity
Year: 2016 PMID: 27933066 PMCID: PMC5121286 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2016.00530
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Diagrammatic comparison between conventional CD28. This illustration summarizes findings from various investigators as described in the text. The diagram shown was modified from (32) with permission from Aging and Disease journal under the terms of Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). This license allows the unrestricted use, distribution, modification, and reproduction in any medium by the author with credited citation of the original publication.
Figure 2NK-like T cells are linked to high cognitive and physical function. Data shown are 3D scatter plot summaries from the re-analyses of our data from the All Stars cohort of the Cardiovascular Health Study (70). CD16 and CD56 expression on CD4+ CD28null and CD8+ CD28null T cells are expressed as GMFI, which was determined by multicolor flow cytometry. Older adults were grouped as unimpaired (solid triangles) or impaired (open circles) based on a simple criterion of ADL = 0 and ADL > 1, respectively. Measurements of 3MS cognition score and gait speed and ADL scoring are as described in the text.