Branca Pereira,Roel P. H. De Maeyer,Luciana Polaco Covre,Djamel Nehar-Belaid,Alessio Lanna,Martin Hayward,Radu Marcheş,Emma S. Chambers,Daniel Cláudio Oliveira Gomes,Natalie E. Riddell,Mala K. Maini,Vitor H. Teixeira,Sam M. Janes,Derek W. Gilroy,Anis Larbi,Neil A. Mabbott,Duygu Ucar,George A. Kuchel,Siân M. Henson,Jessica Strid,Jun Hee Lee,Jacques Banchereau,Arne N. Akbar
Aging is associated with remodeling of the immune system to enable the maintenance of life-long immunity. In the CD8+ T cell compartment, aging results in the expansion of highly differentiated cells that exhibit characteristics of cellular senescence. Here we found that CD27−CD28−CD8+ T cells lost the signaling activity of the T cell antigen receptor (TCR) and expressed a protein complex containing the agonistic natural killer (NK) receptor NKG2D and the NK adaptor molecule DAP12, which promoted cytotoxicity against cells that expressed NKG2D ligands. Immunoprecipitation and imaging cytometry indicated that the NKG2D–DAP12 complex was associated with sestrin 2. The genetic inhibition of sestrin 2 resulted in decreased expression of NKG2D and DAP12 and restored TCR signaling in senescent-like CD27−CD28−CD8+ T cells. Therefore, during aging, sestrins induce the reprogramming of non-proliferative senescent-like CD27−CD28−CD8+ T cells to acquire a broad-spectrum, innate-like killing activity. Akbar and colleagues show that sestrins induce the reprogramming of non-proliferative, senescent-like CD27–CD28–CD8+ T cells to acquire an innate-like killing activity modulated by the NK receptor NKG2D and the adaptor molecule DAP12.