AI Article Synopsis

  • Microbial exposure during early development can have lasting impacts on an individual's health, particularly influencing the immune system.
  • This study reveals that early exposure to microbes affects the development of CD8+ T cells, leading to a stronger immune response against infections that invade cells.
  • The research shows that this immune system "education" occurs in the thymus during development, resulting in a more efficient immune response that persists into adulthood.

Article Abstract

Microbial exposure during development can elicit long-lasting effects on the health of an individual. However, how microbial exposure in early life leads to permanent changes in the immune system is unknown. Here, we show that the microbial environment alters the set point for immune susceptibility by altering the developmental architecture of the CD8+ T cell compartment. In particular, early microbial exposure results in the preferential expansion of highly responsive fetal-derived CD8+ T cells that persist into adulthood and provide the host with enhanced immune protection against intracellular pathogens. Interestingly, microbial education of fetal-derived CD8+ T cells occurs during thymic development rather than in the periphery and involves the acquisition of a more effector-like epigenetic program. Collectively, our results provide a conceptual framework for understanding how microbial colonization in early life leads to lifelong changes in the immune system.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9894172PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2212548119DOI Listing

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