Abstract

A diverse immune repertoire is capable of recognizing the enormous universe of foreign antigens encountered over life. Aging has a profound impact on the immune repertoires. However, whether continuous age-related changes in the immune repertoires differ between sexes is unclear. In this study, the characteristics of immune repertoires stratified by sex during aging are deciphered by analyzing T-cell receptor β-chain (TRB) and immunoglobulin heavy chain (IGH) sequences in 361 healthy adults. A similar change was observed between males and females across their lifespan, whereas age-subgroup analysis revealed sex-specific signatures in TRB and IGH repertoires. In regard to TRB, in males, repertoire richness and evenness increases slightly before the age of 32 years and 45 years respectively, and decreases sharply thereafter. Intriguingly, in females, they decrease significantly until around the age 57 years old, and subsequently undergo a stable stage up to the age of 83 years. Although IGH repertoire evenness increases significantly with age in both sexes, richness decreases significantly with age in males but remains stable in females. Moreover, average length of IGH CDR3 increases with age. In conclusion, these findings provide fundamental insights into the mechanisms underlying sex differences in adaptive immunity.

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