Abstract

Research into the age-associated decline in the immune system has focused on the factors that contribute to the accumulation of senescent CD8 T cells. Less attention has been paid to the non-immune factors that may maintain the pool of naïve CD8 T cells. Here, we analyzed the status of the naïve CD8 T-cell population in healthy nonagenarians (≥90-year-old), old (60–79-year-old), and young (20–34-year-old) subjects. Naïve CD8 T cells were defined as CD28 +CD95 − as this phenotype showed a strong co-expression of the CD45RA +, CD45RO −, and CD127 + phenotypes. Although there was an age-associated decline in the percentage of CD28 +CD95 − CD8 T cells, the healthy nonagenarians maintained a pool of naïve CD28 +CD95 − cells that contained T-cell receptor excision circles (TREC) + cells. The percentages of naïve CD28 +CD95 − CD8 T cells in the nonagenarians correlated with the sera levels of insulin-like growth factor binding protein 3 (IGFBP3) and leptin. Higher levels of triiodothyronine (T3) negatively correlated with the accumulation of TREC −CD28 −CD95 + CD8 T cells from nonagenarians. These results suggest a model in which IGFBP3, leptin and T3 act as non-immune factors to maintain a larger pool of naïve CD8 T cells in healthy nonagenarians.

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