生物
人口
细胞生物学
细胞分裂
体细胞
CD8型
细胞毒性T细胞
免疫学
表观遗传学
T细胞
细胞生长
干细胞
免疫系统
细胞
遗传学
体外
医学
基因
环境卫生
作者
Andrew G. Soerens,Marco Künzli,Clare F. Quarnstrom,Milcah C. Scott,Lee Swanson,JJ. Locquiao,Hazem E. Ghoneim,Dietmar Zehn,Ben Youngblood,Vaiva Vezys,David Masopust
出处
期刊:Nature
[Springer Nature]
日期:2023-01-18
卷期号:614 (7949): 762-766
被引量:91
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41586-022-05626-9
摘要
Differentiated somatic mammalian cells putatively exhibit species-specific division limits that impede cancer but may constrain lifespans1–3. To provide immunity, transiently stimulated CD8+ T cells undergo unusually rapid bursts of numerous cell divisions, and then form quiescent long-lived memory cells that remain poised to reproliferate following subsequent immunological challenges. Here we addressed whether T cells are intrinsically constrained by chronological or cell-division limits. We activated mouse T cells in vivo using acute heterologous prime–boost–boost vaccinations4, transferred expanded cells to new mice, and then repeated this process iteratively. Over 10 years (greatly exceeding the mouse lifespan)5 and 51 successive immunizations, T cells remained competent to respond to vaccination. Cells required sufficient rest between stimulation events. Despite demonstrating the potential to expand the starting population at least 1040-fold, cells did not show loss of proliferation control and results were not due to contamination with young cells. Persistent stimulation by chronic infections or cancer can cause T cell proliferative senescence, functional exhaustion and death6. We found that although iterative acute stimulations also induced sustained expression and epigenetic remodelling of common exhaustion markers (including PD1, which is also known as PDCD1, and TOX) in the cells, they could still proliferate, execute antimicrobial functions and form quiescent memory cells. These observations provide a model to better understand memory cell differentiation, exhaustion, cancer and ageing, and show that functionally competent T cells can retain the potential for extraordinary population expansion and longevity well beyond their organismal lifespan. Through iterative cycles of viral challenge and rechallenge over ten years, mouse T cells are demonstrated to have essentially infinite potential for population expansion and longevity without malignant transformation or loss of functional competence.
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