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Thymic Involution Perturbs Negative Selection Leading to Autoreactive T Cells That Induce Chronic Inflammation

Brandon Coder, Hongjun Wang, Linhui Ruan, Dong‐Ming Su

The Journal of Immunology · 2015 · ▲ 125 citations

Abstract

Thymic involution and the subsequent amplified release of autoreactive T cells increase the susceptibility toward developing autoimmunity, but whether they induce chronic inflammation with advanced age remains unclear. The presence of chronic low-level proinflammatory factors in elderly individuals (termed inflammaging(definition)) is a significant risk factor for morbidity and mortality in virtually every chronic age-related disease. To determine how thymic involution leads to the persistent release and activation of autoreactive T cells capable of inducing inflammaging, we used a Foxn1 conditional knockout mouse model that induces accelerated thymic involution while maintaining a young periphery. We found that thymic involution leads to T cell activation shortly after thymic egress, which is accompanied by a chronic inflammatory phenotype consisting of cellular infiltration into non-lymphoid tissues, increased TNF-α production, and elevated serum IL-6. Autoreactive T cell clones were detected in the periphery of Foxn1 conditional knockout mice. A failure of negative selection, facilitated by decreased expression of Aire rather than impaired regulatory T cell generation, led to autoreactive T cell generation. Furthermore, the young environment can reverse age-related regulatory T cell accumulation in naturally aged mice, but not inflammatory infiltration. Taken together, these findings identify thymic involution and the persistent activation of autoreactive T cells as a contributing source of chronic inflammation (inflammaging).

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Provenance

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.4049/jimmunol.1500082
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2026-06-08 MST

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APA
Coder, B., Wang, H., Ruan, L., &amp; Su, D. (2015). Thymic Involution Perturbs Negative Selection Leading to Autoreactive T Cells That Induce Chronic Inflammation. <em>The Journal of Immunology</em>. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1500082
Vancouver
Coder B, Wang H, Ruan L, Su D. Thymic Involution Perturbs Negative Selection Leading to Autoreactive T Cells That Induce Chronic Inflammation. The Journal of Immunology. 2015. doi:10.4049/jimmunol.1500082.
BibTeX
@article{brandon2015Thymic, title = {Thymic Involution Perturbs Negative Selection Leading to Autoreactive T Cells That Induce Chronic Inflammation}, author = {Brandon Coder and Hongjun Wang and Linhui Ruan and Dong‐Ming Su}, journal = {The Journal of Immunology}, year = {2015}, doi = {10.4049/jimmunol.1500082}, }

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