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Senescent T cells: Beneficial and detrimental roles

Phatthamon Laphanuwat, Daniel Cláudio Oliveira Gomes, Arne N. Akbar

Immunological Reviews · 2023 · ▲ 53 citations

Abstract

As the thymus involutes during aging, the T-cell pool has to be maintained by the periodic expansion of preexisting T cells during adulthood. A conundrum is that repeated episodes of activation and proliferation drive the differentiation of T cells toward replicative senescence(definition), due to telomere(definition) erosion. This review discusses mechanisms that regulate the end-stage differentiation (senescence) of T cells. Although these cells, within both CD4 and CD8 compartments, lose proliferative activity after antigen-specific challenge, they acquire innate-like immune function. While this may confer broad immune protection during aging, these senescent T cells may also cause immunopathology, especially in the context of excessive inflammation in tissue microenvironments.

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Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.1111/imr.13206
Canonical
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Fetched
2026-06-15 MST

Cite this

APA
Laphanuwat, P., Gomes, D.C.O., &amp; Akbar, A.N. (2023). Senescent T cells: Beneficial and detrimental roles. <em>Immunological Reviews</em>. https://doi.org/10.1111/imr.13206
Vancouver
Laphanuwat P, Gomes DCO, Akbar AN. Senescent T cells: Beneficial and detrimental roles. Immunological Reviews. 2023. doi:10.1111/imr.13206.
BibTeX
@article{phatthamon2023Senesc, title = {Senescent T cells: Beneficial and detrimental roles}, author = {Phatthamon Laphanuwat and Daniel Cláudio Oliveira Gomes and Arne N. Akbar}, journal = {Immunological Reviews}, year = {2023}, doi = {10.1111/imr.13206}, }

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