Immunity & Ageing (Jun 2025)

Frequency of synaptic antigen-specific CD4+ T cells in dementia is age-dependent but not correlated with cognitive impairment

  • Julius Hoffmann,
  • Marie-Luise Machule,
  • Jakob Kreye,
  • Laura Stöffler,
  • Péter Körtvelyessy,
  • Maria Buthut,
  • Rosa Rößling,
  • Petra Bacher,
  • Alexander Scheffold,
  • Harald Prüss

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12979-025-00516-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Neurodegenerative dementias including Alzheimer disease severely impair cognitive and social abilities and are a major cause of mortality with no causal treatment yet. Autoimmune mechanisms have been increasingly considered to contribute to disease progression, e.g. by enhancing protein misfolding or pro-inflammatory immune responses. Understanding this contribution may lead to novel treatment options beyond removing neurodegeneration-associated proteins. We hypothesized that CD4+ TH cells against synaptic proteins may play a role in dementia, given the profound changes of synaptic proteins in the disease. We investigated TH cell frequencies and phenotypes after antigen-reactive T cell enrichment (ARTE) using three important synaptic antigens known to play a role in cognitive function, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate receptor (NMDAR), Leucine-rich, glioma inactivated 1 (LGI1) and metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 (mGluR5). Our data revealed that synaptic autoantigen-specific TH cells occurred in all cohorts and were similarly frequent in patients with dementia and sex- and age-matched controls. However, they were significantly reduced compared to young healthy subjects, indicating strong age-related effects (‘immune senescence’). Compared to the ubiquitously available Candida albicans antigen, synaptic autoantigen-specific TH cell responses were strongly driven by IFNγ-producing T cells, expression of which markedly decreased with age. Patients with dementia had significantly less IL-17-producing synaptic autoantigen-specific TH cells than aged healthy controls. This first direct ex vivo quantitative and qualitative analysis of circulating T cells autoreactive to three synaptic autoantigens in dementia shows no correlation with cognitive impairment. It suggests that synaptic autoantigen-specific TH cells decline with age and are not a major driver of dementia development.

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