Characterization of age-related changes in bovine CD8(+) T-cells
Evaluation of the changes induced by immunological interventions requires a baseline against which to compare those changes. The age-related changes in the CD8+ T-cell population of cattle were studied. The results indicate that CD8+ T-cells could be divided into ?/? TCR1+ and ?/? TCR1? according to their expression of the ?/? T-cell receptor. As a proportion, the CD8+ ?/? TCR1+ population appears to increase with age. Within the CD8+?/? TCR1? a population of cells expressing a profile of surface molecules previously associated with effector memory T cells (CD45RO+, CD62L?, CD27?, CD45RA? and CD28?) increases with age. Furthermore, a parallel increase with age in the proportion of CD8+CD45RO+ T cells that express the cytotoxic granule protein perforin was observed. In peripheral tissues, namely lungs, it was found that the majority of CD8+ T cells present expressed a phenotype indicative of previously primed T cells (high expression of CD45RO and perforin). In contrast, only a small population of memory CD8+ T cells was present in lymphoid tissue where most of the CD8+ T cells expressed a naïve phenotype. In conclusion, in cattle, like in human, CD8+ T cells that express a phenotype associated with antigen experience accumulate with age that may play a role in immunocompetence as the individual ages.
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