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  • Partial restoration of T‐ce...
    Lages, Celine S.; Lewkowich, Ian; Sproles, Alyssa; Wills‐Karp, Marsha; Chougnet, Claire

    Aging cell, October 2010, 2010-Oct, 2010-10-00, 20101001, Letnik: 9, Številka: 5
    Journal Article

    Summary Programmed cell death‐1 (PD‐1) is a newly characterized negative regulator of immune responses. The interaction of PD‐1 with its ligands (PD‐L1 and PD‐L2) inhibits T‐cell proliferation and cytokine production in young mice. Increased PD‐1 expression has been described during chronic infections, inducing chronic activation of the immune system to control it. As aging is associated with chronic immune activation, PD‐1 may contribute to age‐associated T‐cell dysfunction. Our data showed the following results in aged mice: (i) the number of PD‐1‐expressing T cells and the level of expression of PD‐Ls was increased on dendritic cell subsets and T cells; (ii) PD‐1+ T cells were exhausted effector memory T cells, as shown by their lower level of CD127, CD25 and CD28, as well as their limited proliferative and cytokine‐producing capacity; (iii) the expression of PD‐1 was up‐regulated after T‐cell receptor‐mediated activation of CD8+ T cells, but not of CD4+ T cells; (iv) blockade of the PD‐1/PD‐L1 pathway moderately improved the cytokine production of T cells from old mice but did not restore their proliferation; and (v) blockade of the PD‐1/PD‐L1 pathway did not restore function of PD‐1+ T cells; its effect appeared to be exclusively mediated by increased functionality of the PD‐1− T cells. Our data thus suggest that blockade of the PD‐1/PD‐L1 is not likely to be efficient at restoring exhausted T‐cell responses in aged hosts, although improving the responses of PD‐1− T cells may prove to be a helpful strategy in enhancing primary responses.