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Shaping immunity for life: Layered development of CD8 + T cells.

Cybelle TabilasNorah L SmithBrian D Rudd
Published in: Immunological reviews (2023)
Historically, the immune system was believed to develop along a linear axis of maturity from fetal life to adulthood. Now, it is clear that distinct layers of immune cells are generated from unique waves of hematopoietic progenitors during different windows of development. This model, known as the layered immune model, has provided a useful framework for understanding why distinct lineages of B cells and γδ T cells arise in succession and display unique functions in adulthood. However, the layered immune model has not been applied to CD8 + T cells, which are still often viewed as a uniform population of cells belonging to the same lineage, with functional differences between cells arising from environmental factors encountered during infection. Recent studies have challenged this idea, demonstrating that not all CD8 + T cells are created equally and that the functions of individual CD8 + T cells in adults are linked to when they were created in the host. In this review, we discuss the accumulating evidence suggesting there are distinct ontogenetic subpopulations of CD8 + T cells and propose that the layered immune model be extended to the CD8 + T cell compartment.
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