Utrecht Center for Quantitative Immunology


Kiki Tesselaar

Kiki Tesselaar

Laboratory Translational Immunology
University Medical Center Utrecht
Utrecht University
T cells are important players in the adaptive immunity to (viral) pathogens. Loss of naive T cells leads to increased susceptibility to infections, as seen in HIV infected patients and in the elderly. T cell production by the thymus and the average lifespan of the peripheral T cells determine steady state T cell numbers. We are interested in the contribution of these characteristics under different (pathological) situations like aging, chronic immune activation, immune reconstitution and primary immunodeficiencies.

Thanks to the recent introduction of stable isotope labeling we can measure in vivo cell proliferation and death, and determine in vivo rates of leukocyte turnover in humans. We determine these parameters of T cells in healthy subjects and determine how these rates change during healthy aging. Similar studies in patients are performed to study how the population dynamics of T cells change when the immune system is disturbed. In patients with primary immune deficiency these studies are complemented with in depth functional and phenotypical characterization of the patients lymphocyte compartment. In combination with genetic analyses, we aim to identify the underlying cause of the immune deficiency and determine the effects of the implicated protein(s) on immunity.

Current studies in HIV infections are focused on immune recovery in patients receiving cART. A successfully treated patient should have completely restored immunity and no increased morbidity or mortality. We investigate the effects and interplay of residual immune activation, treatment protocols and host factors on T cell turnover and treatment success. Our human studies are paralleled by studies in mice. This allows us to overcome the limitations involved in measurement and manipulation of the T-cell compartment in men and offers the possibility to use mice with a genetically manipulated immune system and analyze tissues inaccessible in humans.

Five key publications

  • What's your age again? Determination of human neutrophil half-lives revisited. Tak T, Tesselaar K, Pillay J, Borghans JA, Koenderman L. J Leukoc Biol. 2013 Oct;94(4):595-601. doi: 10.1189/jlb.1112571.
  • Quantitating lymphocyte homeostasis in vivo in humans using stable isotope tracers. Westera L, Zhang Y, Tesselaar K, Borghans JA, Macallan DC. Methods Mol Biol. 2013;979:107-31. doi: 10.1007/978-1-62703-290-2_10.
  • A generalized mathematical model to estimate T- and B-cell receptor diversities using AmpliCot. Baltcheva I, Veel E, Volman T, Koning D, Brouwer A, Le Boudec JY, Tesselaar K, de Boer RJ, Borghans JA. Biophys J. 2012 Sep 5;103(5):999-1010.
  • Maintenance of peripheral naive T cells is sustained by thymus output in mice but not humans. den Braber I, Mugwagwa T, Vrisekoop N, Westera L, Mogling R, de Boer AB, Willems N, Schrijver EH, Spierenburg G, Gaiser K, Mul E, Otto SA, Ruiter AF, Ackermans MT, Miedema F, Borghans JA, de Boer RJ, Tesselaar K. Immunity. 2012 Feb 24;36(2):288-97. doi: 10.1016/j.immuni.2012.02.006.
  • Sparse production but preferential incorporation of recently produced naive T cells in the human peripheral pool. Vrisekoop N, den Braber I, de Boer AB, Ruiter AF, Ackermans MT, van der Crabben SN, Schrijver EH, Spierenburg G, Sauerwein HP, Hazenberg MD, de Boer RJ, Miedema F, Borghans JA, Tesselaar K. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Apr 22;105(16):6115-20. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0709713105