Radiation Exposure Impairs Memory CD8 T Cells, Study Finds


Medical radiation exposure has doubled over the past decade, largely due to diagnostic tools such as X-rays and CT scans. While often lifesaving, radiation weakens the immune system by depleting lymphocytes, leaving individuals more vulnerable to infections and cancer. A new study explores how different subsets of memory CD8 T cells respond to radiation and what this means for immune recovery (Figure 1).

Figure 1: Generation of 1M and 4M CD8 T cell populations within the same host. (A) Experimental design. Naïve Thy1.1/1.1 and tertiary memory (3M) Thy1.1/1.2 TCR-Tg P14 CD8 T cells were co-adoptively transferred into naïve Thy1.2/1.2 C57BL/6 (B6) hosts at a ratio of 1:10, followed by LCMV-Arm (2 × 105 PFU intraperitoneally) infection to generate allelically distinct primary memory (1M) and quaternary memory (4M) populations. (B) Representative gating of TCR-Tg P14 and endogenous Thy1.2/1.2 CD8 T cells (left) and of 1M and 4M P14 CD8 T cells (right). (C) Expression of CD62L, CD127, CD122, KLRG1, and CX3CR1 on gated 1M and 4M P14 CD8 T cells. Representative histograms are shown. (D) Quantification of geometric mean fluorescence intensity (gMFI) of cell surface markers from panel C. Data are representative from at least 3 independent experiments with at least 5 mice per group. Error bars represent the SD of the mean. ***P < 0.001 using 2-tailed Student’s t test.

CD8 T cells under stress

CD8 T cells are critical for eliminating pathogens and cancer cells. Their memory subtypes depend on prior antigen exposure:

  • 1M CD8 T cells arise after a single infection or vaccination.
  • 4M CD8 T cells develop after multiple exposures or booster vaccinations.

Previous work showed that 1M cells are more resistant to radiation-induced death than naïve CD8 T cells, but their numbers fail to recover. Elizabeth Escue, MS, and colleagues investigated whether 4M CD8 T cells fared differently.

Findings

  • Both 1M and 4M CD8 T cells were susceptible to radiation-induced cell death.
  • 1M CD8 T cells stabilized after the acute damage phase.
  • 4M CD8 T cells continued to decline over time, showing greater long-term impairment.
  • All irradiated memory subsets showed reduced cytokine production, but 4M CD8 T cells were especially poor at proliferating after new antigen exposure.

The study highlights that restoring immune memory in radiation-exposed individuals requires addressing multiple layers of CD8 T cell dysfunction.

Journal article: Escue, E.A., et al. 2025. The ability of memory CD8 T cell subsets to numerically and functionally recover following whole body irradiation is influenced by their history of cognate antigen exposures, The Journal of Immunology.

Summary by Stefan Botha

 
 
 
 
 
 
International Union of Immunological SocietiesUniversity of South AfricaInstitute of Infectious Disease and Molecular MedicineElizabeth Glazer Pediatric Aids Foundation
 

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