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Research shows that T cells behave differently in older people

Researchers from the Akbar Group, together with collaborators from the Jackson Laboratories, amongst others, have contradicted the previously held theory that T cells work less well in older people. They do though, behave differently.

4 May 2020

Colorized scanning electron micrograph of a T lymphocyte (resized). Credit: NIAID

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T cells are part of adaptive immunity, the part of the immune system that is trained to recognise specific foreign invaders. It is this branch of immunity that we train when we vaccinate.

For years, scientists believed that T cells from older people stopped functioning properly as a result of a process called “senescence” – essentially the loss of a cell’s ability to replicate. The Akbar lab has now discovered that instead of becoming useless, old T cells switch their focus by acquiring functions not usually associated with them. These functions help T cells combat stresses more frequently encountered in ageing organs – older, damaged and pre-cancerous cells.

The researchers went on to discover that a family of stress-sensing proteins, called sestrins, drive this altered T cell function by causing expression on the cell surface of proteins usually associated with natural killer cells. These allow killer T cells to target cells for death using different cellular machinery than is conventional.

Professor Akbar said: “It is now hoped that the combination of sestrins and natural killer receptors can provide what may well be tractable therapeutic targets to improve traditional T cell function in older people.”

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  • Profile: Professor Arne Akbar
  • Twitter: @akbarlab

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  • Colorized scanning electron micrograph of a T lymphocyte (resized). Credit: NIAID via Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

Highlights in Medical Sciences

Millions could benefit from faster prostate cancer scan
healthy prostate scan

Research

Millions could benefit from faster prostate cancer scan

Results of the PRIME trial involving UCL Medical Sciences researchers have found that a quicker, cheaper MRI scan was just as accurate at diagnosing prostate cancer as the current 30-40 minute scan.

10 September 2025

UCL Cancer Institute awarded Athena SWAN Gold
Athena Swan Gold Award

Award

UCL Cancer Institute awarded Athena SWAN Gold

The UCL Cancer Institute has been awarded Athena SWAN Gold in recognition of its sustained commitment to advancing gender equality in higher education and research.

20 May 2025

New Dean of Medical Sciences appointed
Professor Emma Morris

Announcement

New Dean of Medical Sciences appointed

Internationally recognised clinician scientist, Professor Emma Morris, will take up the role of Dean of UCL's Faculty of Medical Sciences in August 2025.

28 February 2025

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