Age-related thymic involution increases vulnerability to cancers and infection in older adults, yet the driving mechanisms and its impact on peripheral T cells remain unclear. Using single-cell sequencing, we here analyzed 387,762 cells from human thymus and peripheral blood of young and aged individuals. Within thymus, we found aging reduced T-lineage potential in early thymic progenitors but increased innate lymphocyte lineage potential. Aged thymus were enriched in mature T cells with low SOX4 expression and inflammatory profiles but depleted of thymic epithelial cells and expression of tissue-restricted antigens. In the periphery, we identified transcriptional features of T cell aging and established a naive T cell-based model for immune age prediction. Furthermore, we identified CD38 as a marker of recent thymic emigrants. Finally, single-cell T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire sequencing identified shifts in TCR repertoire diversity within memory/effector T cells and expanded virus-specific T cells during aging. Collectively, our data offer insights into human thymic involution and peripheral T cell aging and could inform strategies to restore compromised T cell immunity.
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Yujun Deng
Sichuan University
Ziqiao Peng
Dalian Medical University
Mingxing Zhang
Soochow University
Sichuan University
Army Medical University
West China Hospital of Sichuan University
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Deng et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68ff87e2c8c50a61f2bdcdeb — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s43587-025-00990-3