Frontiers in Immunology (Aug 2017)

Dynamics of Recent Thymic Emigrants in Young Adult Mice

  • Vera van Hoeven,
  • Julia Drylewicz,
  • Julia Drylewicz,
  • Liset Westera,
  • Ineke den Braber,
  • Tendai Mugwagwa,
  • Kiki Tesselaar,
  • José A. M. Borghans,
  • Rob J. de Boer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2017.00933
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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The peripheral naive T-cell pool is generally thought to consist of a subpopulation of recent thymic emigrants (RTEs) and a subpopulation of mature naive (MN) T cells with different dynamics. Thymus transplantation and adoptive transfer studies in mice have provided contradicting results, with some studies suggesting that RTEs are relatively short-lived cells, while another study suggested that RTEs have a survival advantage. We here estimate the death rates of RTE and MN T cells by performing both thymus transplantations and deuterium labeling experiments in mice of at least 12 weeks old, an age at which the size of the T-cell pool has stabilized. For CD4+ T cells, we found the total loss rate from the RTE compartment (by death and maturation) to be fourfold faster than that of MN T cells. We estimate the death rate of CD4+ RTE to be 0.046 per day, which is threefold faster than the total loss rate from the MN T-cell compartment. For CD8+ T cells, we found no evidence for kinetic differences between RTE and MN T cells. Thus, our data support the notion that in young adult mice, CD4+ RTE are relatively short-lived cells within the naive CD4+ T-cell pool.

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