scholarly journals Some of the Immunogenetics Aspects of Aging

2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 16-30
Author(s):  
Bushra N. Al Hadra

Summary The human life span could be influenced by the combined effect of environment, lifestyle, and genetic factors. Twin and family studies suggest that our genes control up to 25% of the lifespan. The aging immune system undergoes age-associated changes at multiple levels, resulting in a gradual loss of its ability to protect the organism against infections, low vaccine responses, and an increased probability of developing autoimmune diseases and malignancies. The highly polymorphic HLA complex is one of the major gene candidates associated with aging due to its crucial role in developing adaptive immunity and protecting the organism. Most of the data available have so far demonstrated a positive association with healthy aging for HLA alleles/haplotypes as protective against malignancies, autoimmune diseases, and conferring better control and response to infections. One of aging’s main manifestations is the chronic, low-grade inflammatory state observed in older people, caused by an imbalance between pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines. In general, it is has been agreed that longevity is related to anti-inflammatory genotype profiles. With advanced age, changes also occur in the B cell repertoire, which significantly affects the humoral immunity and leads to inadequate responses to infections and vaccines in the elderly. New genetic biomarkers associated with aging are being explored and discovered, contributing to a better understanding of the molecular processes underlying the immune dysfunction related to aging and developing strategies for rejuvenating the immune system based on immune-risk phenotypes.

Gerontology ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 65 (2) ◽  
pp. 145-154 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lutz Hamann ◽  
Juan S. Ruiz-Moreno ◽  
Malgorzata Szwed ◽  
Malgorzata Mossakowska ◽  
Linn Lundvall ◽  
...  

Background: Aging is a multifactorial process driven by several conditions. Among them, inflamm-aging is characterized by chronic low-grade inflammation driving aging-related diseases. The aged immune system is characterized by the senescence-associated secretory phenotype, resulting in the release of proinflammatory cytokines contributing to inflamm-aging. Another possible mechanism resulting in inflamm-aging could be the increased release of danger- associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) by increased cell death in the elderly, leading to a chronic low-grade inflammatory response. Several pattern recognition receptors of the innate immune system are involved in recognition of DAMPs. The DNA-sensing cGAS-STING pathway plays a pivotal role in combating viral and bacterial infections and recognizes DNA released by cell death during the process of aging, which in turn may result in increased inflamm-aging. Objective: The aim of this study was to investigate whether a variation within the STING gene with known impaired function may be associated with protection from aging-related diseases by decreasing the process of inflamm-aging. Methods: STING (Tmem173) R293Q was genotyped in a cohort of 3,397 aged subjects (65–103 years). The distribution of the variant allele in healthy subjects and subjects suffering from aging-associated diseases was compared by logistic regression analysis. Results: We show here that STING 293Q allele carriers were protected from aging-associated diseases (OR = 0.823, p = 0.038). This effect was much stronger in the subgroup of subjects suffering from chronic lung diseases (OR = 0.730, p = 0.009). Conclusion: Our results indicate that decreased sensitivity of the innate immune receptors is associated with healthy aging, most likely due to a decreased process of inflamm-aging.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (22) ◽  
pp. 12539
Author(s):  
Ludmila Müller ◽  
Svetlana Di Benedetto

Aging is characterized by the dynamic remodeling of the immune system designated “immunosenescence,” and is associated with altered hematopoiesis, thymic involution, and lifelong immune stimulation by multitudinous chronic stressors, including the cytomegalovirus (CMV). Such alterations may contribute to a lowered proportion of naïve T-cells and to reduced diversity of the T-cell repertoire. In the peripheral circulation, a shift occurs towards accumulations of T and B-cell populations with memory phenotypes, and to accumulation of putatively senescent and exhausted immune cells. The aging-related accumulations of functionally exhausted memory T lymphocytes, commonly secreting pro-inflammatory cytokines, together with mediators and factors of the innate immune system, are considered to contribute to the low-grade inflammation (inflammaging) often observed in elderly people. These senescent immune cells not only secrete inflammatory mediators, but are also able to negatively modulate their environments. In this review, we give a short summary of the ways that immunosenescence, inflammaging, and CMV infection may cause insufficient immune responses, contribute to the establishment of the hyperinflammatory syndrome and impact the severity of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in elderly people.


Author(s):  
Christina Permata Shalim ◽  
Angelina Yoewono ◽  
Yeodi Utomo ◽  
RA Tuty Kuswardhani

Elderly tends to be more susceptible to infections and chronic diseases. Malnutrition, immunosenescence, and changes in the gut microbiota affect susceptibility to the elderly. Several studies have shown that there is a change in the composition and variability of gut microbiota as we grow older. These changes are considered to increasing the risk of infection and play a role in the pathogenesis of various diseases in elderly. Supplementation of probiotics is expected to overcome the microbiota changes in the elderly and therefore improve the health of the elderly. In this review we will discuss about normal gut microbiota, changes in gut microbiota in the elderly, and effects of probiotics, prebiotics and synbiotics supplementation in the elderly. We will also review recent studies on the health benefits of probiotics for the elderly immune system as a new strategy for healthy aging. Recent data suggests that supplementation of probiotics can increase the immunity of the elderly. Further research is needed so that probiotic supplementation can be applied in clinical setting as a supporting therapy to improve the health of the elderly.


2019 ◽  
Vol 40 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
N R Bonetti ◽  
L Liberale ◽  
L Pasterk ◽  
C Diaz-Canestro ◽  
A Akhmedov ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Stroke is the second leading cause of death and the number one cause of adult disability worldwide. As a strongly age-dependant disease, its prevalence is expected to rise along with the average age in western populations. While the epidemiological evidence linking stroke to age is non-refutable, the specific and independent effects of age on stroke remain elusive. This presents an important missing link for developing targeted treatments tailored to the growing elderly population. A potential mechanism pertinent to stroke outcome in the elderly is a chronic low-grade inflammatory state, coined “inflamm-aging”. Such a phenomenon could not only increase the risk for stroke, but also negatively affect its outcome and thus offers both preventive and therapeutic value. Purpose To determine the specific effects of age on the outcome after stroke in mice and delineate culprit molecular pathways with a focus on inflammatory mediators and to assess the efficacy of specific anti-inflammatory treatment with the TNF-α antibody Infliximab in this setting. Methods Old (18–20 months) C57BL/6 wildtype mice were compared to young (12 weeks) controls. Baseline levels of inflammatory cytokines were assayed in plasma and brain homogenates by ELISA. Ischemic stroke was induced by transient middle cerebral artery occlusion (30 minutes/48 h). Neurological function was assessed by a Bederson based score and the RotaRod test. Anti-inflammatory treatment with Infliximab was administered to a subset of old mice via weekly intraperitoneal injections (10 mg/kg) for 4 weeks prior to stroke induction. Young and old control animals received vehicle. Results At baseline (prior to stroke), old animals showed significantly higher plasma levels of TNF-α compared to young (Fig. 1A), while IL-6 and IL-1β remained below detection level in both groups. In brain homogenates of healthy old and young animals, TNF-α and IL-1β did not differ, while IL-6 was below detection level. Old mice showed significantly larger stroke sizes (Fig.1B), performed worse neurologically (Fig. 1C) and suffered from higher post-stroke mortality compared to young (Fig. 1D). Pre-treatment with the TNF-α inhibitor Infliximab significantly decreased stroke size, neurological impairment and mortality in old animals (Fig1B-D). Figure 1 Conclusions In a model lacking additional confounding factors, we demonstrate a direct adverse effect of age per se on stroke outcome and mortality. Elevated TNF-α plasma levels in old mice outline the mechanism of “inflamm-aging” as a possible culprit. This concept is strongly supported by the beneficial effect of Infliximab on stroke outcome in old animals. Further investigation of the downstream mediators of the observed effect could help in tailoring treatments to the particularly vulnerable and growing elderly population.


Author(s):  
Carlotta Suardi ◽  
Emanuela Cazzaniga ◽  
Stephanie Graci ◽  
Dario Dongo ◽  
Paola Palestini

The strong spread of COVID-19 and the significant number of deaths associated with it could be related to improper lifestyles, which lead to a low-grade inflammation (LGI) that not only increases the risk of chronic diseases, but also the risk of facing complications relating to infections and a greater susceptibility to infections themselves. Recently, scientific research has widely demonstrated that the microbiota plays a fundamental role in modulating metabolic responses in the immune system. There is, in fact, a two-way interaction between lifestyle, infection, and immunity. The immune response is compromised if nutrition is unbalanced or insufficient, because diet affects the intestinal flora predisposing people to infections and, at the same time, the nutritional state can be aggravated by the immune response itself to the infection. We evaluate the link between balanced diet, the efficiency of the immune system, and microbiota with the aim of providing some practical advice for individuals, with special attention to the elderly. A correct lifestyle that follows the Mediterranean model, which is especially rich in plant-based foods along with the use of extra-virgin olive oil, are the basis of preventing LGI and other chronic pathologies, directly influencing the intestinal microbiota and consequently the immune response.


Nutrients ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (11) ◽  
pp. 3696
Author(s):  
Edyta Wawrzyniak-Gramacka ◽  
Natalia Hertmanowska ◽  
Anna Tylutka ◽  
Barbara Morawin ◽  
Eryk Wacka ◽  
...  

One of the latest theories on ageing focuses on immune response, and considers the activation of subclinical and chronic inflammation. The study was designed to explain whether anti-inflammatory diet and lifestyle exercise affect an inflammatory profile in the Polish elderly population. Sixty individuals (80.2 ± 7.9 years) were allocated to a low-grade inflammation (LGI n = 33) or high-grade inflammation (HGI n = 27) group, based on C-reactive protein concentration (<3 or ≥3 mg/L) as a conventional marker of systemic inflammation. Diet analysis focused on vitamins D, C, E, A, β-carotene, n-3 and n-6 PUFA using single 24-h dietary recall. LGI demonstrated a lower n-6/n-3 PUFA but higher vitamin D intake than HGI. Physical performance based on 6-min walk test (6MWT) classified the elderly as physically inactive, whereby LGI demonstrated a significantly higher gait speed (1.09 ± 0.26 m/s) than HGI (0.72 ± 0.28 m/s). Circulating interleukins IL-1β, IL-6, IL-13, TNFα and cfDNA demonstrated high concentrations in the elderly with low 6MWT, confirming an impairment of physical performance by persistent systemic inflammation. These findings reveal that increased intake of anti-inflammatory diet ingredients and physical activity sustained throughout life attenuate progression of inflammaging in the elderly and indicate potential therapeutic strategies to counteract pathophysiological effects of ageing.


Nutrients ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 16
Author(s):  
María Juárez-Fernández ◽  
David Porras ◽  
María Victoria García-Mediavilla ◽  
Sara Román-Sagüillo ◽  
Javier González-Gallego ◽  
...  

Gut microbiota (GM) is involved in the maintenance of physiological homeostasis, thus the alteration of its composition and functionality has been associated with many pathologies such as metabolic diseases, and could also be linked with the progressive degenerative process in aging. Nowadays, life expectancy is continuously rising, so the number of elder people and the consequent related pathologies demand new strategies to achieve healthy aging. Besides, actual lifestyle patterns make metabolic diseases a global epidemic with increasing trends, responsible for a large mortality and morbidity in adulthood and also compromising the health status of later stages of life. Metabolic diseases and aging share a profile of low-grade inflammation and innate immunity activation, which may have disturbances of GM composition as the leading mechanism. Thus, GM emerges as a therapeutic target with a double impact in the elderly, counteracting both aging itself and the frequent metabolic diseases in this population. This review summarizes the role and compositional changes of the GM in aging and its modulation through nutritional interventions and physical exercise as a strategy to counteract the aging process and the related metabolic diseases.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
Lilian Maria Peixoto Lopes ◽  
Emerson Cruz de Oliveira ◽  
Lenice Kappes Becker ◽  
Guilherme de Paula Costa ◽  
Kelerson Mauro de Castro Pinto ◽  
...  

Aging is a biological process during which chronic low-grade inflammation is present due to changes in the immune system of the elderly. The main objective of this study is to evaluate the effects of resistance training associated with dietary advice on chronic inflammation in the elderly. We conducted a prospective intervention study in which we evaluated anthropometric parameters and inflammatory biomarkers (CRP, IL-8, CCL-2, and leptin) in 40 elderly people before and after long-term progressive resistance training (19 weeks) associated with dietary advice. The participants trained twice a week on nonconsecutive days, and the training lasted one hour with an intensity of 60-85% of 1-MR. Dietary advice was explained in person and individually focusing on foods rich in compounds with anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties. Participants were instructed at the beginning of the training program, and dietary advice was reinforced verbally weekly. There was an improvement in body composition evidenced by a reduction in waist circumference and body fat percentage and by the increase in arm circumference, calf circumference, and corrected arm muscle area. In addition, there was a reduction in the inflammatory biomarkers CCL-2 (p=0.01) and leptin (p<0.01). Resistance training associated with dietary guidance can contribute to a healthy aging due to observed improvements in body composition and in the inflammatory profile of the elderly.


Author(s):  
Peter Derkx ◽  
Hanne Laceulle

Humanism, as a meaning frame, is defined by four characteristics: human agency; human dignity; self-realization; and love of vulnerable, unique, and irreplaceable persons. A humanist view of aging is in favor of healthy aging and life extension, but human life is and remains inherently vulnerable (not just medically), and in a humanist view other aims are regarded as deserving a higher priority than life extension for privileged social groups with already a high (healthy) life expectancy. Humanist priorities are (1) a better social organization of a person’s life course with a better balance among learning, working, caring, and enjoying; (2) more social justice—for too long differences in socio-economic status have been determinants of shocking differences in health and longevity; (3) development and dissemination of cultural narratives that better accommodate the fulfillment of essential meaning-needs of the elderly than the stereotyping decline- and age-defying narratives); (4) less loneliness and social isolation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. 1-3
Author(s):  
Ruby Dhar ◽  
Arun Kumar ◽  
Subhradip Karmakar

COVID-19 pandemic has far-reaching consequences on people with comorbidities like Diabetes Mellitus (DM), asthma, cardiovascular disease, and cancer. What seems unusual is an isolated observation that emerged from several independent studies worldwide. Postmenopausal females seem to suffer from severe COVID symptoms. Few of them also show an extended COVID symptom, also “LONG COVID.” Though the association appears strong, there are not enough credible studies to pin it down to the exact cause. We explored the possibility to see if postmenopausal females are at a higher risk for severe COVID and unravel this observation’s molecular pathogenesis. Research performed at King’s College London found that as estrogen levels in females drop in pre-menopause and menopause, they become vulnerable to COVID19 infection, suggesting that high estrogen levels may have a protective effect against the severity of COVID-19. This concept originated from the immune-modulatory and immune suppressive role of estradiol. Although both male and female sex steroids act primarily on the reproductive tissues and modulate their functions, increasing evidence suggests that sex steroids can also work on non-reproductive tissues like the CNS, immune systems, cardiovascular and skeletal systems, etc.Further, estrogen has an enormous effect both on the innate (macrophages/monocytes, neutrophils, NK cells, complement systems, APC-like dendritic cells (DC)], as well as on the adaptive (B and T cells) immune system. There are reports that estrogen may exhibit a pro-inflammatory response, whereas testosterone counteracts it. This could possibly be through an estrogen-mediated production of inflammatory cytokines like IFNγ, interleukin (IL) 6, TNF α. However, estrogen also has a profound anti-inflammatory effect. We need to remember that many of these observations are context and cell-type-specific with a delicate balance between pro and anti-inflammatory responses. There needs a deeper understanding of the reproductive events in females. Perimenopause, menopause, and postmenopause define the end of a woman’s reproductive years. These are the time when her monthly period stops. Whole perimenopause marks the beginning of this process, starting 8- 12 years before menopause. Menopause is the stage when her menstrual periods completely ceases for at least 12 months. Postmenopause is the stage after menopause that continues thereafter. Starting from perimenopause, menopause is marked by declining levels of estrogen((estrone (E1), 17β-estradiol (E2), estriol (E3)), and progesterone. However, there are complex hormonal and cytokine undercurrents to this rather simplistic profile. LH and FSH, however, seem to surge during this period. It currently not know what this LH/FSH surge means for the immune system. With the approach of menopause, there is the release of extracellular vesicles containing inflammasomes, which may be responsible for low-grade systemic inflammation.This cascade may build up significantly and contribute to a hyper-inflammatory environment. According to a survey by Global Health 50/50, though an equal number of males and females were tested positive for COVID-19, the males were largely presented with severe symptoms, thereby implying that the female hormones may have a protective role in the pathophysiology of COVID-19. Further clinical studies performed on the females showed that pre-menopausal females have a relatively mild disease, while menopausal females had moderate to severe illness. The menopausal group also has significantly more requirements for oxygen, ventilation support, and progression-to-severe disease with a prolonged hospital stay and mortality. This is further reinforced by the fact that estradiol modulates the immune cells, which could play an essential role in explaining why a lower incidence of COVID-19 is observed among women than in men. Even been a nuclear hormone, estrogen has cytoplasmic targets. The cytoplasmic activity of estrogen-activated ERα leads to PI3K induction. This, in turn, prevents the nuclear shuttling and transport of NF Menopause kB, resulting in reduced inflammation. The estrogen axis for inflammation is enormously complex, riddled by the different receptor types usage and post-receptor events. The presence of estrogen receptors (ESRs), ERα and ERβ, is of prime importance since the net outcome depends on ER subtypes in use. It seems that a preferential engagement of ERbeta promotes inflammation while ERalpha dampens it. It was further demonstrated that hypoxia, associated with inflammatory conditions, could also downregulate the expression of ERα, tipping the balance in favor of inflammation. Then there are interferon genes that cross talks with Estrogen receptor (ESR) signaling. Estrogen can also polarize toward a TH2 response eliciting a protective humoral response in addition to its capacity for activation of NK cells. Further, a wide variety of immune-modulatory roles is under estrogenic control. This involves the antigen-presenting dendritic cells, CD4+ and CD8+ T cell populations. Other than estrogen, progesterone also has a profound influence on the immune system. Progesterone was found to have an antiviral effect against SARS-CoV-2 in vitro. Mature NK CD56dimCD16+KIR+ cells overexpress the progesterone receptor and thus are hormone-sensitive. Though there are conflicting reports regarding the association of disease severity and mortality with estrogen levels, it is plausible that drastic alteration of these hormones at menopause could perturb the delicate balance creating an environment that enhances the immune response fueling the cytokine storm, the hallmark for COVID complications. Further research in this area is needed to decipher the intricate molecular details of this process for future risk mitigation and disease management.


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