Publication date: 20 February 2018
Source:Immunity, Volume 48, Issue 2
Author(s): Brahma V. Kumar, Thomas J. Connors, Donna L. Farber
Throughout life, T cells coordinate multiple aspects of adaptive immunity, including responses to pathogens, allergens, and tumors. In mouse models, the role of T cells is studied in the context of a specific type of pathogen, antigen, or disease condition over a limited time frame, whereas in humans, T cells control multiple insults simultaneously throughout the body and maintain immune homeostasis over decades. In this review, we discuss how human T cells develop and provide essential immune protection at different life stages and highlight tissue localization and subset delineation as key determinants of the T cell functional role in immune responses. We also discuss how anatomic compartments undergo distinct age-associated changes in T cell subset composition and function over a lifetime. It is important to consider age and tissue influences on human T cells when developing targeted strategies to modulate T cell-mediated immunity in vaccines and immunotherapies.
Teaser
Recent studies of human T cells in diverse tissue sites have revealed that the functional role of T cells is closely linked to the anatomical location, subset, and developmental stage. Kumar et al. review these advances and highlight human-specific aspects of T cell immunity.http://ift.tt/2CbRART
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