[HTML][HTML] Short telomere syndromes cause a primary T cell immunodeficiency

CL Wagner, VS Hanumanthu… - The Journal of …, 2018 - Am Soc Clin Investig
CL Wagner, VS Hanumanthu, CC Talbot, RS Abraham, D Hamm, DL Gable, CG Kanakry
The Journal of clinical investigation, 2018Am Soc Clin Investig
The mechanisms that drive T cell aging are not understood. We report that children and
adult telomerase mutation carriers with short telomere length (TL) develop a T cell
immunodeficiency that can manifest in the absence of bone marrow failure and causes life-
threatening opportunistic infections. Mutation carriers shared T cell–aging phenotypes seen
in adults 5 decades older, including depleted naive T cells, increased apoptosis, and
restricted T cell repertoire. T cell receptor excision circles (TRECs) were also undetectable …
The mechanisms that drive T cell aging are not understood. We report that children and adult telomerase mutation carriers with short telomere length (TL) develop a T cell immunodeficiency that can manifest in the absence of bone marrow failure and causes life-threatening opportunistic infections. Mutation carriers shared T cell–aging phenotypes seen in adults 5 decades older, including depleted naive T cells, increased apoptosis, and restricted T cell repertoire. T cell receptor excision circles (TRECs) were also undetectable or low, suggesting that newborn screening may identify individuals with germline telomere maintenance defects. Telomerase-null mice with short TL showed defects throughout T cell development, including increased apoptosis of stimulated thymocytes, their intrathymic precursors, in addition to depleted hematopoietic reserves. When we examined the transcriptional programs of T cells from telomerase mutation carriers, we found they diverged from older adults with normal TL. Short telomere T cells upregulated DNA damage and intrinsic apoptosis pathways, while older adult T cells upregulated extrinsic apoptosis pathways and programmed cell death 1 (PD-1) expression. T cells from mice with short TL also showed an active DNA-damage response, in contrast with old WT mice, despite their shared propensity to apoptosis. Our data suggest there are TL-dependent and TL-independent mechanisms that differentially contribute to distinct molecular programs of T cell apoptosis with aging.
The Journal of Clinical Investigation