Memories that last: Dynamics of memory T cells throughout the body

Publication date

2023-07

Authors

Derksen, Lyanne
Tesselaar, K.ORCID 0000-0002-9847-0814ISNI 0000000391966347
Borghans, J.A.M.ISNI 0000000388976122

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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cc_by

Abstract

Memory T cells form an essential part of immunological memory, which can last for years or even a lifetime. Much experimental work has shown that the individual cells that make up the memory T-cell pool are in fact relatively short-lived. Memory T cells isolated from the blood of humans, or the lymph nodes and spleen of mice, live about 5–10 fold shorter than naive T cells, and much shorter than the immunological memory they convey. The commonly accepted view is, therefore, that long-term T-cell memory is maintained dynamically rather than by long-lived cells. This view is largely based on memory T cells in the circulation, identified using rather broad phenotypic markers, and on research in mice living in overly clean conditions. We wondered to what extent there may be heterogeneity in the dynamics and lifespans of memory T cells. We here review what is currently known about the dynamics of memory T cells in different memory subsets, locations in the body and conditions of microbial exposure, and discuss how this may be related to immunometabolism and how this knowledge can be used in various clinical settings.

Keywords

antigen-specific, dynamics, immunometabolism, memory T cells, microbiome, tissue-resident, Immunology and Allergy, Immunology

Citation

Derksen, L Y, Tesselaar, K & Borghans, J A M 2023, 'Memories that last : Dynamics of memory T cells throughout the body', Immunological Reviews, vol. 316, no. 1, pp. 38-51. https://doi.org/10.1111/imr.13211