Abstract

Sepsis remains a major cause of death in the United States and worldwide, and costs associated with treating septic patients place a large burden on the healthcare industry. Patients who survive the acute phase of sepsis display long-term impairments in immune function due to reductions in numbers and function of many immune cell populations. This state of chronic immunoparalysis renders sepsis survivors increasingly susceptible to infection with newly or previously encountered infections. CD4 T cells play important roles in the development of cellular and humoral immune responses following infection. Understanding how sepsis impacts the CD4 T cell compartment is critical for informing efforts to develop treatments intended to restore immune system homeostasis following sepsis. This review will focus on the current understanding of how sepsis impacts the CD4 T cell responses, including numerical representation, repertoire diversity, phenotype and effector functionality, subset representation (e.g., Th1 and Treg frequency), and therapeutic efforts to restore CD4 T cell numbers and function following sepsis. Additionally, we will discuss recent efforts to model the acute sepsis phase and resulting immune dysfunction using mice that have previously encountered infection, which more accurately reflects the immune system of humans with a history of repeated infection throughout life. A thorough understanding of how sepsis impacts CD4 T cells based on previous studies and new models that accurately reflect the human immune system may improve translational value of research aimed at restoring CD4 T cell-mediated immunity, and overall immune fitness following sepsis.

Highlights

  • Sepsis is life-threatening organ dysfunction that results from an exaggerated host immune response to disseminated infection [1]

  • This review will focus on our understanding of how CD4 T cells are impacted by sepsis and how changes within the CD4 T cell compartment affect overall immune fitness

  • Considering that increased expression of inhibitory molecules BTLA and PD-1 on monocytes/macrophages following sepsis has been shown to impact bacterial clearance [34, 35], these findings suggest that alterations in monocytes/macrophages contribute to defective host innate immunity resulting from sepsis

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Summary

Introduction

Sepsis is life-threatening organ dysfunction that results from an exaggerated host immune response to disseminated infection [1]. Ag-specific populations that failed to recover numerically displayed functional defects including decreased ability to proliferate and to produce cytokines following infection or incubation with cognate Ag and to mount Th17 polarized responses.

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