Short Lifespans of Memory T-cells in Bone Marrow, Blood, and Lymph Nodes Suggest That T-cell Memory Is Maintained by Continuous Self-Renewal of Recirculating Cells

Publication date

2018

Authors

Baliu-Piqué, Mariona
Verheij, Myrddin W
Drylewicz, JuliaISNI 0000000357090505
Ravesloot, LarsISNI 0000000507301276
de Boer, Rob J.ORCID 0000-0002-2130-691XISNI 000000039525534X
Koets, A. P.ISNI 0000000391713796
Tesselaar, Kiki
Borghans, José A.M.ISNI 0000000388976122

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

Memory T-cells are essential to maintain long-term immunological memory. It is widely thought that the bone marrow (BM) plays an important role in the long-term maintenance of memory T-cells. There is controversy however on the longevity and recirculating kinetics of BM memory T-cells. While some have proposed that the BM is a reservoir for long-lived, non-circulating memory T-cells, it has also been suggested to be the preferential site for memory T-cell self-renewal. In this study, we used in vivo deuterium labeling in goats to simultaneously quantify the average turnover rates-and thereby expected lifespans-of memory T-cells from BM, blood and lymph nodes (LN). While the fraction of Ki-67 positive cells, a snapshot marker for recent cell division, was higher in memory T-cells from blood compared to BM and LN, in vivo deuterium labeling revealed no substantial differences in the expected lifespans of memory T-cells between these compartments. Our results support the view that the majority of memory T-cells in the BM are self-renewing as fast as those in the periphery, and are continuously recirculating between the blood, BM, and LN.

Keywords

bone marrow, memory T-cells, lymphocyte turnover, lifespan, stable isotope labeling, deuterium, mathematical modeling

Citation

Baliu-Piqué, M, Verheij, M W, Drylewicz, J, Ravesloot, L, de Boer, R J, Koets, A, Tesselaar, K & Borghans, J A M 2018, 'Short Lifespans of Memory T-cells in Bone Marrow, Blood, and Lymph Nodes Suggest That T-cell Memory Is Maintained by Continuous Self-Renewal of Recirculating Cells', Frontiers in Immunology, vol. 9, 2054. https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2018.02054