Changes in the expression of surface receptors on lymphocyte subsets in the elderly: Quantitative flow cytometric analysis
- 2 May 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in American Journal of Hematology
- Vol. 67 (2) , 63-72
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ajh.1082
Abstract
The immunophenotype of circulating lymphocytes, including the intensity expression of surface receptors, changes with ageing. Until now, no results of systematic studies on age‐dependent changes with respect to the expression of the major lymphocyte surface receptors in healthy elderly subjects have been reported. In order to identify age‐related changes in both representation and immunophenotype of lymphocyte populations, we investigated, by means of triple‐color whole‐blood immunostaining and quantitative flow cytometry, the percent values and the absolute numbers, as well as the levels of surface antigen expression or antigen molecules per cell (ABC values × 103), of different peripheral blood lymphocyte subsets from 23 healthy elderly subjects and 13 young donors. Naive (CD45RA+CD3+) T cells, total B cells, and CD5+ B lymphocytes are decreased (22%, 6%, 0.8% vs. 30%, 12%, 1.4%, respectively), whereas activated (HLA‐DR+CD3+) and memory (CD45RO+CD3+) T cells, CD3+CD7− T lymphocytes, and lymphocytes expressing the NK marker CD56 are expanded in the elderly (2%, 53%, 13%, 6% vs. 0.8%, 45%, 8%, 8%, respectively). Moreover, T lymphocytes from elderly individuals express lower CD3 (61 ± 10) compared to young (69 ± 10). Considering the different T‐cell populations, CD3 antigen is respectively decreased on CD45RO+ T cells (55 ± 14 vs. 66 ± 14) and up‐regulated on CD56+ T lymphocytes (62 ± 21 vs. 45 ± 20). Increased CD8 expression characterizes CD3+CD7− lymphocytes (70 ± 34 vs. 44 ± 17) while HLA‐DR on activated T cells is lower in old (39 ± 7) than young (46 ± 9) donors. CD7 is down‐regulated both in T (22 ± 3 vs. 28 ± 3) and NK (48 ± 18 vs. 71 ± 18) cells, whereas CD2 expression, unchanged on NK cells, is up‐regulated on T lymphocytes (54 ± 10 vs. 41 ± 8). Age‐related changes in B‐cell antigen expressions were also found: CD20 is increased (124 ± 23 vs. 105 ± 16) whereas, despite the unchanged CD5 expression of T cells, CD5 intensity on the B‐cell subset co‐expressing this antigen is higher in old (49 ± 37) than in young (22 ± 4) people. The observed changes in the expression of functionally important cellular receptors can contribute to the remodeling of immune function characteristic of the elderly. Moreover, since quantitative flow cytometry is becoming widely employed in clinical practice, our results also contribute to the assessment of specific age‐dependent antigen expression changes to be considered for diagnostic approaches in the elderly. Am. J. Hematol. 67:63–72, 2001.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Changes in Antigen Expression on B Lymphocytesduring HIV Inf ectionPathobiology, 1998
- ImmunosenescenceImmunology Today, 1997
- DiscussionMechanisms of Ageing and Development, 1997
- Differential expression of T cell antigens in normal peripheral blood lymphocytes: a quantitative analysis by flow cytometry.Journal of Clinical Pathology, 1996
- Differential expression of CD3 and CD7 in T‐cell malignancies: a quantitative study by flow cytometryBritish Journal of Haematology, 1996
- Changes in antigen densities on leukocyte subsets correlate with progression of HIV diseaseInternational Immunology, 1996
- Antigen presentation mediated by recycling of surface HLA-DR moleculesNature, 1995
- The immunology of exceptional individuals: the lesson of centenariansImmunology Today, 1995
- Progressive increase of CD7- T cells in human blood lymphocytes with ageingClinical and Experimental Immunology, 1994
- T‐Lymphocyte Activation: The Biology and Function of CD2 and CD4Immunological Reviews, 1989