Cell Reports (Nov 2019)

Defects in Antiviral T Cell Responses Inflicted by Aging-Associated miR-181a Deficiency

  • Chulwoo Kim,
  • Rohit R. Jadhav,
  • Claire E. Gustafson,
  • Megan J. Smithey,
  • Alec J. Hirsch,
  • Jennifer L. Uhrlaub,
  • William H. Hildebrand,
  • Janko Nikolich-Žugich,
  • Cornelia M. Weyand,
  • Jörg J. Goronzy

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29, no. 8
pp. 2202 – 2216.e5

Abstract

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Summary: Generation of protective immunity to infections and vaccinations declines with age. Studies in healthy individuals have implicated reduced miR-181a expression in T cells as contributing to this defect. To understand the impact of miR-181a expression on antiviral responses, we examined LCMV infection in mice with miR-181ab1-deficient T cells. We found that miR-181a deficiency delays viral clearance, thereby biasing the immune response in favor of CD4 over CD8 T cells. Antigen-specific CD4 T cells in mice with miR-181a-deficient T cells expand more and have a broader TCR repertoire with preferential expansion of high-affinity T cells than in wild-type mice. Importantly, generation of antigen-specific miR-181a-deficient CD8 effector T cells is particularly impaired, resulting in lower frequencies of CD8 T cells in the liver even at time points when the infection has been cleared. Consistent with the mouse model, CD4 memory T cells in individuals infected with West Nile virus at older ages tend to be more frequent and of higher affinity. : T cell aging in humans is associated with progressive loss in miR-181a, the implications of which for antiviral immunity are unknown. Using mouse models, Kim et al. find that miR-181a deficiency in T cells reproduces many aging features including impaired effector T cell expansion, viral clearance, generation of tissue-residing T cells, and recall responses. Keywords: immunosenescence, antiviral response, microRNA, CD8 effector T cell, T cell repertoire, immune aging