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Dendritic cell immaturity during infancy restricts the capacity to express vaccine-specific T-cell memory

Version 2 2024-06-06, 12:40
Version 1 2022-03-31, 12:06
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-06, 12:40 authored by JW Upham, A Rate, J Rowe, M Kusel, PD Sly, PG Holt
ABSTRACT The capacity of the immune system in infants to develop stable T-cell memory in response to vaccination is attenuated, and the mechanism(s) underlying this developmental deficiency in humans is poorly understood. The present study focuses on the capacity for expression of in vitro recall responses to tetanus and diphtheria antigens in lymphocytes from 12-month-old infants vaccinated during the first 6 months of life. We demonstrate that supplementation of infant lymphocytes with “matured” dendritic cells (DC) cultured from autologous CD14 + precursors unmasks previously covert cellular immunity in the form of Th2-skewed cytokine production. Supplementation of adult lymphocytes with comparable prematured autologous DC also boosted vaccine-specific T-cell memory expression, but in contrast to the case for the infants, these cytokine responses were heavily Th1 skewed. Compared to adults, infants had significantly fewer circulating myeloid DC ( P < 0.0001) and plasmacytoid DC ( P < 0.0001) as a proportion of peripheral blood mononuclear cells. These findings suggest that deficiencies in the numbers of antigen-presenting cells and their functional competence at 12 months of age limit the capacity to express effector memory responses and are potentially a key factor in reduced vaccine responsiveness in infants.

History

Journal

Infection and Immunity

Volume

74

Pagination

1106-1112

Location

United States

ISSN

0019-9567

eISSN

1098-5522

Language

English

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

2

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY