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T-cell Cholesterol Accumulation, Aging, and Atherosclerosis

Venetia Bazioti, Benedek Halmos, Marit Westerterp

2023Current Atherosclerosis Reports25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Purpose of Review The majority of leukocytes in advanced human atherosclerotic plaques are T-cells. T-cell subsets exert pro- or anti-atherogenic effects largely via the cytokines they secrete. T regulatory cells (T regs ) are anti-inflammatory, but may lose these properties during atherosclerosis, proposed to be downstream of cholesterol accumulation. Aged T-cells also accumulate cholesterol. The effects of T-cell cholesterol accumulation on T-cell fate and atherosclerosis are not uniform. Recent findings T-cell cholesterol accumulation enhances differentiation into pro-atherogenic cytotoxic T-cells and boosts their killing capacity, depending on the localization and extent of cholesterol accumulation. Excessive cholesterol accumulation induces T-cell exhaustion or T-cell apoptosis, the latter decreasing atherosclerosis but impairing T-cell functionality in terms of killing capacity and proliferation. This may explain the compromised T-cell functionality in aged T-cells and T-cells from CVD patients. Summary The extent of T-cell cholesterol accumulation and its cellular localization determine T-cell fate and downstream effects on atherosclerosis and T-cell functionality.

Topics & Concepts

Cytotoxic T cellCholesterolCellCell biologyT cellCell growthSecretionBiologyChemistryMedicineImmunologyEndocrinologyBiochemistryImmune systemIn vitroAtherosclerosis and Cardiovascular DiseasesT-cell and B-cell Immunology
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