Abstract

Bone marrow (BM) plays an important role in the long-term maintenance of memory T cells. Yet, BM is found in numerous bones throughout the body, which are not equal in structure, as they differ in their ratio of cortical and trabecular bone. This implies that BM cells within different bones are subjected to different microenvironments, possibly leading to differences in their frequencies and function. To address this, we examined BM from murine tibia, femur, pelvis, sternum, radius, humerus, calvarium, and the vertebrae and analyzed the presence of effector memory (TEM), central memory (TCM), and naïve (TNV) CD8+ T cells. During steady-state conditions, the frequency of the total CD8+ T cell population was comparable between all bones. Interestingly, most CD8+ T cells were located in the vertebrae, as it contained the highest amount of BM cells. Furthermore, the frequencies of TEM, TCM, and TNV cells were similar between all bones, with a majority of TNV cells. Additionally, CD8+ T cells collected from different bones similarly expressed the key survival receptors IL-7Rα and IL-15Rβ. We also examined BM for memory CD8+ T cells with a tissue-resident memory phenotype and observed that approximately half of all TEM cells expressed the retention marker CD69. Remarkably, in the memory phase of acute infection with the lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV), we found a massive compositional change in the BM CD8+ T cell population, as the TEM cells became the dominant subset at the cost of TNV cells. Analysis of Ki-67 expression established that these TEM cells were in a quiescent state. Finally, we detected higher frequencies of LCMV-specific CD8+ T cells in BM compared to spleen and found that BM in its entirety contained fivefold more LCMV-specific CD8+ T cells. In conclusion, although infection with LCMV caused a dramatic change in the BM CD8+ T cell population, this did not result in noticeable differences between BM collected from different bones. Our findings suggest that in respect to CD8+ T cells, BM harvested from a single bone is a fair reflection of the rest of the BM present in the murine body.

Highlights

  • The bone marrow (BM) acts as the primary site for the formation of all mature blood cells through the process of hematopoiesis

  • By calculating the total number of Bone marrow (BM) CD8+ T cells found in the entire body, we demonstrate that BM is superior to spleen in harboring memory CD8+ T cells, and that this is attributed to the major contribution of the memory CD8+ T cells present in the vertebrae

  • Regarding the presence of the classical CD8+ T cell subsets, i.e., effector memory (TEM; CD44+CD62L−), central memory (TCM; CD44+CD62L+), and naïve (TNV; CD44−CD62L+) T cells [20, 21], we found that all bones consisted primarily (~65%) of TNV cells (Figures 1C,D)

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Summary

Introduction

The bone marrow (BM) acts as the primary site for the formation of all mature blood cells through the process of hematopoiesis. Farrell et al [4] found similar numbers of human HSCs and myeloid progenitor cells (GM-CFCs) in trochanter marrow (region between the epiphysis and diaphysis of the femur) compared to marrow in the femoral epiphysis They observed a decline in numbers of femoral marrow-derived GM-CFCs in aged individuals, while the numbers for GM-CFCs derived from trochanter marrow did not change. Substantial heterogeneity has been found in bone remodeling activity, blood volume fraction, and hypoxia between epiphysis, diaphysis, and calvarium, which were shown to affect HSC function [5]. These data indicate that distinct compartments within the BM are different, leading to functional differences for the cells that reside in these specific niches

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