Abstract

Normal ageing is associated with an impaired systemic immune response contributing to an increased susceptibility to infectious diseases. The aim of this study was to compare the lymphocyte phenotype in human skin from old and young healthy subjects. Skin samples from donors were used for explant cultures before flow cytometric analysis. Our results depicted a higher proportion of CD4+ and a lower proportion of CD8+ among CD3+ T cells, a decreased proportion of CD45RA+ naive T cells (3.5±1.9% vs 22.9±11.1%, P≤0.007) and an upregulation of the expression of CD39 and PD1 on CD3+ CD4+ T cells (25.1±8.5% vs 12.5±8.5%, P≤0.003, 68.8±11.6% vs 50.0±11.3%, P≤0.01, respectively) in the skin of old subjects. These findings could explain a reduced generation of long-lived memory T cells and an impaired antitumoral response in the skin of the elderly.

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