Skin T cells maintain their diversity and functionality in the elderly.
Hanako Koguchi-YoshiokaElena HofferStanley CheukYutaka MatsumuraSa VoPetra KjellmanLucian GremaYosuke IshitsukaYoshiyuki NakamuraHanako Koguchi-YoshiokaYasuhiro FujisawaManabu FujimotoLiv EidsmoRachael A ClarkRei WatanabePublished in: Communications biology (2021)
Recent studies have highlighted that human resident memory T cells (TRM) are functionally distinct from circulating T cells. Thus, it can be postulated that skin T cells age differently from blood-circulating T cells. We assessed T-cell density, diversity, and function in individuals of various ages to study the immunologic effects of aging on human skin from two different countries. No decline in the density of T cells was noted with advancing age, and the frequency of epidermal CD49a+ CD8 TRM was increased in elderly individuals regardless of ethnicity. T-cell diversity and antipathogen responses were maintained in the skin of elderly individuals but declined in the blood. Our findings demonstrate that in elderly individuals, skin T cells maintain their density, diversity, and protective cytokine production despite the reduced T-cell diversity and function in blood. Skin resident T cells may represent a long-lived, highly protective reservoir of immunity in elderly people.