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Short telomere syndromes cause a primary T cell immunodeficiency
Christa L. Wagner, Vidya Sagar Hanumanthu, C. Conover Talbot, Roshini S. Abraham, David Hamm, Dustin L. Gable, Christopher G. Kanakry, Carolyn Applegate, Janet D. Siliciano, J. Brooks Jackson, Stephen Desiderio, Jonathan K. Alder, Leo Luznik, Mary Armanios
Journal of Clinical Investigation · 2018 · ▲ 123 citations
Abstract
The mechanisms that drive T cell aging are not understood. We report that children and adult telomerase mutation carriers with short telomere(definition) 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.
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- 10.1172/jci120216
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- 2026-06-17 MST
Cite this
APA
Wagner, C.L., Hanumanthu, V.S., Talbot, C.C., Abraham, R.S., Hamm, D., Gable, D.L., Kanakry, C.G., Applegate, C., Siliciano, J.D., Jackson, J.B., Desiderio, S., Alder, J.K., Luznik, L., & Armanios, M. (2018). Short telomere syndromes cause a primary T cell immunodeficiency. <em>Journal of Clinical Investigation</em>. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci120216
Vancouver
Wagner CL, Hanumanthu VS, Talbot CC, Abraham RS, Hamm D, Gable DL, et al. Short telomere syndromes cause a primary T cell immunodeficiency. Journal of Clinical Investigation. 2018. doi:10.1172/jci120216.
BibTeX
@article{christa2018Shortt,
title = {Short telomere syndromes cause a primary T cell immunodeficiency},
author = {Christa L. Wagner and Vidya Sagar Hanumanthu and C. Conover Talbot and Roshini S. Abraham and David Hamm and Dustin L. Gable and Christopher G. Kanakry and Carolyn Applegate and Janet D. Siliciano and J. Brooks Jackson and Stephen Desiderio and Jonathan K. Alder and Leo Luznik and Mary Armanios},
journal = {Journal of Clinical Investigation},
year = {2018},
doi = {10.1172/jci120216},
}
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