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Neonatal thymectomy reveals differentiation and plasticity within human naive T cells
Authors:Theo van den Broek  Eveline M. Delemarre  Willemijn J.M. Janssen  Rutger A.J. Nievelstein  Jasper C. Broen  Kiki Tesselaar  Jose A.M. Borghans  Edward E.S. Nieuwenhuis  Berent J. Prakken  Michal Mokry  Nicolaas J.G. Jansen  Femke van Wijk
Affiliation:1Laboratory of Translational Immunology,;2Department of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine,;3Division of Pediatrics,;4Epigenomics Facility, and;5Department of Pediatric Intensive Care/Pediatric Cardiothoracic Surgery, University Medical Center Utrecht/Wilhelmina Children’s Hospital, Utrecht, Netherlands.
Abstract:
The generation of naive T cells is dependent on thymic output, but in adults, the naive T cell pool is primarily maintained by peripheral proliferation. Naive T cells have long been regarded as relatively quiescent cells; however, it was recently shown that IL-8 production is a signatory effector function of naive T cells, at least in newborns. How this functional signature relates to naive T cell dynamics and aging is unknown. Using a cohort of children and adolescents who underwent neonatal thymectomy, we demonstrate that the naive CD4+ T cell compartment in healthy humans is functionally heterogeneous and that this functional diversity is lost after neonatal thymectomy. Thymic tissue regeneration later in life resulted in functional restoration of the naive T cell compartment, implicating the thymus as having functional regenerative capacity. Together, these data shed further light on functional differentiation within the naive T cell compartment and the importance of the thymus in human naive T cell homeostasis and premature aging. In addition, these results affect and alter our current understanding on the identification of truly naive T cells and recent thymic emigrants.
Keywords:
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