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Systemic immunostimulation induces glucocorticoid-mediated thymic involution succeeded by rebound hyperplasia which is impaired in aged recipients

Systemic immunostimulation induces glucocorticoid-mediated thymic involution succeeded by rebound hyperplasia which is impaired in aged recipients
Systemic immunostimulation induces glucocorticoid-mediated thymic involution succeeded by rebound hyperplasia which is impaired in aged recipients

The thymus is the central organ involved with T-cell development and the production of naïve T cells. During normal aging, the thymus undergoes marked involution, reducing naïve T-cell output and resulting in a predominance of long-lived memory T cells in the periphery. Outside of aging, systemic stress responses that induce corticosteroids (CS), or other insults such as radiation exposure, induce thymocyte apoptosis, resulting in a transient acute thymic involution with subsequent recovery occurring after cessation of the stimulus. Despite the increasing utilization of immunostimulatory regimens in cancer, effects on the thymus and naïve T cell output have not been well characterized. Using both mouse and human systems, the thymic effects of systemic immunostimulatory regimens, such as high dose IL-2 (HD IL-2) with or without agonistic anti-CD40 mAbs and acute primary viral infection, were investigated. These regimens produced a marked acute thymic involution in mice, which correlated with elevated serum glucocorticoid levels and a diminishment of naïve T cells in the periphery. This effect was transient and followed with a rapid thymic "rebound" effect, in which an even greater quantity of thymocytes was observed compared to controls. Similar results were observed in humans, as patients receiving HD IL-2 treatment for cancer demonstrated significantly increased cortisol levels, accompanied by decreased peripheral blood naïve T cells and reduced T-cell receptor excision circles (TRECs), a marker indicative of recent thymic emigrants. Mice adrenalectomized prior to receiving immunotherapy or viral infection demonstrated protection from this glucocorticoid-mediated thymic involution, despite experiencing a substantially higher inflammatory cytokine response and increased immunopathology. Investigation into the effects of immunostimulation on middle aged (7-12 months) and advance aged (22-24 months) mice, which had already undergone significant thymic involution and had a diminished naïve T cell population in the periphery at baseline, revealed that even further involution was incurred. Thymic rebound hyperplasia, however, only occurred in young and middle-aged recipients, while advance aged not only lacked this rebound hyperplasia, but were entirely absent of any indication of thymic restoration. This coincided with prolonged deficits in naïve T cell numbers in advanced aged recipients, further skewing the already memory dominant T cell pool. These results demonstrate that, in both mice and humans, systemic immunostimulatory cancer therapies, as well as immune challenges like subacute viral infections, have the potential to induce profound, but transient, glucocorticoid-mediated thymic involution and substantially reduced thymic output, resulting in the reduction of peripheral naive T cells. This can then be followed by a marked rebound effect with naïve T cell restoration, events that were shown not to occur in advanced-aged mice.

age, glucocoricoids, immune therapy, stress, thymic involution, viral infection
1664-3224
Collins, Craig P
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Khuat, Lam T
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Sckisel, Gail D
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Vick, Logan V
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Minnar, Christine M
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Dunai, Cordelia
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Le, Catherine T
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Curti, Brendan D
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Crittenden, Marka
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Merleev, Alexander
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Sheng, Michael
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Chao, Nelson J
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Maverakis, Emanual
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Rosario, Spencer R
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Monjazeb, Arta M
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Blazar, Bruce R
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Longo, Dan L
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Canter, Robert J
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Murphy, William J
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Collins, Craig P
57337558-437d-41ac-beb4-8e9febeaa023
Khuat, Lam T
ca00b1c8-4f0e-4f61-bb1a-493f120cef8e
Sckisel, Gail D
5b8ed968-c061-4cad-870c-af8e64121504
Vick, Logan V
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Minnar, Christine M
7976b96f-8695-4c6e-a981-b1623075e333
Dunai, Cordelia
28579a87-d6e5-4ba0-abd3-900e8cdfff98
Le, Catherine T
117f8698-50e6-4eec-b01f-bb4cd1eb3ee9
Curti, Brendan D
eba9605c-7de8-4b13-8bb8-e0bb772438df
Crittenden, Marka
b26c6952-ec6e-4b76-b523-8a8f782e43e3
Merleev, Alexander
fa6b37b5-f16a-4d9a-a986-3945231f2532
Sheng, Michael
16784f0e-2e90-46bd-8f6f-2c91148cb57c
Chao, Nelson J
775494d6-b3a5-42e8-bfd1-a3b696b91dce
Maverakis, Emanual
6eccbdca-7a2c-4cc5-a29a-6069dec58fed
Rosario, Spencer R
03798c07-d655-470d-8978-1beb4f94032e
Monjazeb, Arta M
904b7fcb-fcfa-49ab-906c-599c4fa7582f
Blazar, Bruce R
02d9e544-4df8-47d2-8e8e-b345b6303cb8
Longo, Dan L
1d611157-f864-471e-83d3-6e0906489e0b
Canter, Robert J
edec6c77-358e-4fdf-ac7d-4252842efdfe
Murphy, William J
290fec7b-1d9f-4d5d-80f3-4154fda8970c

Collins, Craig P, Khuat, Lam T, Sckisel, Gail D, Vick, Logan V, Minnar, Christine M, Dunai, Cordelia, Le, Catherine T, Curti, Brendan D, Crittenden, Marka, Merleev, Alexander, Sheng, Michael, Chao, Nelson J, Maverakis, Emanual, Rosario, Spencer R, Monjazeb, Arta M, Blazar, Bruce R, Longo, Dan L, Canter, Robert J and Murphy, William J (2024) Systemic immunostimulation induces glucocorticoid-mediated thymic involution succeeded by rebound hyperplasia which is impaired in aged recipients. Frontiers in Immunology, 15, [1429912]. (doi:10.3389/fimmu.2024.1429912).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The thymus is the central organ involved with T-cell development and the production of naïve T cells. During normal aging, the thymus undergoes marked involution, reducing naïve T-cell output and resulting in a predominance of long-lived memory T cells in the periphery. Outside of aging, systemic stress responses that induce corticosteroids (CS), or other insults such as radiation exposure, induce thymocyte apoptosis, resulting in a transient acute thymic involution with subsequent recovery occurring after cessation of the stimulus. Despite the increasing utilization of immunostimulatory regimens in cancer, effects on the thymus and naïve T cell output have not been well characterized. Using both mouse and human systems, the thymic effects of systemic immunostimulatory regimens, such as high dose IL-2 (HD IL-2) with or without agonistic anti-CD40 mAbs and acute primary viral infection, were investigated. These regimens produced a marked acute thymic involution in mice, which correlated with elevated serum glucocorticoid levels and a diminishment of naïve T cells in the periphery. This effect was transient and followed with a rapid thymic "rebound" effect, in which an even greater quantity of thymocytes was observed compared to controls. Similar results were observed in humans, as patients receiving HD IL-2 treatment for cancer demonstrated significantly increased cortisol levels, accompanied by decreased peripheral blood naïve T cells and reduced T-cell receptor excision circles (TRECs), a marker indicative of recent thymic emigrants. Mice adrenalectomized prior to receiving immunotherapy or viral infection demonstrated protection from this glucocorticoid-mediated thymic involution, despite experiencing a substantially higher inflammatory cytokine response and increased immunopathology. Investigation into the effects of immunostimulation on middle aged (7-12 months) and advance aged (22-24 months) mice, which had already undergone significant thymic involution and had a diminished naïve T cell population in the periphery at baseline, revealed that even further involution was incurred. Thymic rebound hyperplasia, however, only occurred in young and middle-aged recipients, while advance aged not only lacked this rebound hyperplasia, but were entirely absent of any indication of thymic restoration. This coincided with prolonged deficits in naïve T cell numbers in advanced aged recipients, further skewing the already memory dominant T cell pool. These results demonstrate that, in both mice and humans, systemic immunostimulatory cancer therapies, as well as immune challenges like subacute viral infections, have the potential to induce profound, but transient, glucocorticoid-mediated thymic involution and substantially reduced thymic output, resulting in the reduction of peripheral naive T cells. This can then be followed by a marked rebound effect with naïve T cell restoration, events that were shown not to occur in advanced-aged mice.

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fimmu-15-1429912 - Version of Record
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Published date: 9 September 2024
Additional Information: Copyright © 2024 Collins, Khuat, Sckisel, Vick, Minnar, Dunai, Le, Curti, Crittenden, Merleev, Sheng, Chao, Maverakis, Rosario, Monjazeb, Blazar, Longo, Canter and Murphy.
Keywords: age, glucocoricoids, immune therapy, stress, thymic involution, viral infection

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 495615
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495615
ISSN: 1664-3224
PURE UUID: 93c6e710-00c8-427d-897d-824f6148168d

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Date deposited: 19 Nov 2024 17:43
Last modified: 19 Nov 2024 17:44

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Contributors

Author: Craig P Collins
Author: Lam T Khuat
Author: Gail D Sckisel
Author: Logan V Vick
Author: Christine M Minnar
Author: Cordelia Dunai
Author: Catherine T Le
Author: Brendan D Curti
Author: Marka Crittenden
Author: Alexander Merleev
Author: Michael Sheng
Author: Nelson J Chao
Author: Emanual Maverakis
Author: Spencer R Rosario
Author: Arta M Monjazeb
Author: Bruce R Blazar
Author: Dan L Longo
Author: Robert J Canter
Author: William J Murphy

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