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An immune system switch in T cell lifespan at birth results in extensive loss of naive fetal T cells during the first week of postnatal life.
- Source :
-
International immunology [Int Immunol] 1997 Sep; Vol. 9 (9), pp. 1253-8. - Publication Year :
- 1997
-
Abstract
- Lymphocyte recirculation is critical to maximize the efficiency of immunological surveillance and is an absolute requirement for the development of systemic memory. The consensus view of the lifespan of peripheral T cells holds that naive T cells are long-lived cells and most memory T cells are short-lived cells, although the question of the lifespan of peripheral T cells is not yet fully resolved. We have studied the lifespan of T cells circulating in efferent lymph draining lymph nodes (LN) in the immunologically naive sheep fetus and in postnatal lambs immediately following birth by examining the in vivo incorporation of [3H]thymidine by newly formed T cells during continuous administration of [3H]thymidine. We report that authentically naive fetal T cells are long-lived cells which continue to recirculate between blood and lymph during fetal life. At birth, however, a process is triggered whereby fetal T cells circulating through LN are rapidly lost from the peripheral T cell pool and are replaced by freshly arriving T cells which have been formed since birth. Our results indicate that by the end of the first week of postnatal life, around three-quarters of the T cells circulating through peripheral LN have been formed since birth.
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0953-8178
- Volume :
- 9
- Issue :
- 9
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- International immunology
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 9310828
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1093/intimm/9.9.1253