TY - JOUR
T1 - Lower proportion of naive peripheral CD8+ T cells and an unopposed pro-inflammatory response to human Cytomegalovirus proteins in vitro are associated with longer survival in very elderly people
AU - Derhovanessian, Evelyna
AU - Maier, Andrea B.
AU - Hahnel, Karin
AU - Zelba, Henning
AU - De Craen, Anton J.M.
AU - Roelofs, Helene
AU - Slagboom, Eline P.
AU - Westendorp, Rudi G.J.
AU - Pawelec, Graham
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments We would like to thank Prof. Hans-Peter Pircher (University of Freiburg) for providing the anti-KRLG1 antibody and Lilly Oettinger for antibody titration and flow cytometry quality controls. This work was supported by the European Commission (FP6 036894, “LifeSpan”; FP7 259679 “IDEAL”), DFG-PA 361/14-1, and the BMBF project “Gerontoshield” (0315890F). The Leiden 85+ study was funded by the Program Translational Research of the Netherlands organization for health research and development, the Leiden University Fund, and by an unrestricted grant from the Netherlands Organization of Scientific Research (ZonMw), the Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sports, and the Netherlands Genomics Initiative/ Netherlands Organization for scientific research [NGI/NWO; 05040202 and 050-060-810 Netherlands Consortium for Healthy Aging (NCHA)].
PY - 2013/8
Y1 - 2013/8
N2 - The low percentages of naive T cells commonly observed in elderly people are thought to be causally associated with mortality, primarily from infectious disease, and are taken as a hallmark of "immunosenescence". Whether low levels of naive cells actually do associate with mortality has, however, not been tested in longitudinal studies. Here, we present correlations between peripheral T-cell phenotypes and 8-year survival in individuals from the population-based prospective Leiden 85-plus Study. Counter-intuitively, we found that a lower frequency of naive CD8+ T cells (characterized as CD45RA+CCR7+CD27+CD28+) at baseline (>88 years) correlated with significantly better survival, while there was a tendency for the reciprocal accumulation of late-differentiated effector memory cells (CD45RA?CCR7?CD27?CD28?) also to associate with better survival. These findings suggest that better retention of memory cells specific for previously encountered antigens may provide a survival advantage in this particular population. Given the prevalence of Cytomegalovirus (CMV) and its reported association with immunosenescence, we tested whether memory for this potential pathogen was relevant to survival. We found that individuals mounting an exclusively pro-inflammatory ex vivo response (TNF, IFN-?, IL- 17) to the major CMV target molecules pp65 and IE1 had a significant survival advantage over those also having anti-inflammatory responses (IL-10). These findings suggest that higher levels of naive T cells may not necessarily be associated with a survival advantage and imply that the nature of immunosurveillance against CMV may be crucial for remaining longevity, at least in the very elderly.
AB - The low percentages of naive T cells commonly observed in elderly people are thought to be causally associated with mortality, primarily from infectious disease, and are taken as a hallmark of "immunosenescence". Whether low levels of naive cells actually do associate with mortality has, however, not been tested in longitudinal studies. Here, we present correlations between peripheral T-cell phenotypes and 8-year survival in individuals from the population-based prospective Leiden 85-plus Study. Counter-intuitively, we found that a lower frequency of naive CD8+ T cells (characterized as CD45RA+CCR7+CD27+CD28+) at baseline (>88 years) correlated with significantly better survival, while there was a tendency for the reciprocal accumulation of late-differentiated effector memory cells (CD45RA?CCR7?CD27?CD28?) also to associate with better survival. These findings suggest that better retention of memory cells specific for previously encountered antigens may provide a survival advantage in this particular population. Given the prevalence of Cytomegalovirus (CMV) and its reported association with immunosenescence, we tested whether memory for this potential pathogen was relevant to survival. We found that individuals mounting an exclusively pro-inflammatory ex vivo response (TNF, IFN-?, IL- 17) to the major CMV target molecules pp65 and IE1 had a significant survival advantage over those also having anti-inflammatory responses (IL-10). These findings suggest that higher levels of naive T cells may not necessarily be associated with a survival advantage and imply that the nature of immunosurveillance against CMV may be crucial for remaining longevity, at least in the very elderly.
KW - Immunosenescence
KW - Mortality .CMV
KW - T-cell subsets
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84886721150&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s11357-012-9425-7
DO - 10.1007/s11357-012-9425-7
M3 - Article
C2 - 22661297
AN - SCOPUS:84886721150
SN - 0161-9152
VL - 35
SP - 1387
EP - 1399
JO - Age
JF - Age
IS - 4
ER -