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Monocyte Phenotype and Polyfunctionality Are Associated With Elevated Soluble Inflammatory Markers, Cytomegalovirus Infection, and Functional and Cognitive Decline in Elderly Adults.
J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 2015 Aug 18. pii: glv121. [Epub ahead of print] doi:
de Pablo-Bernal RS, Cañizares J, Rosado I, Galvá MI, Alvarez-Ríos AI, Carrillo-Vico A, Ferrando-Martínez S, Muñoz-Fernández MÁ, Rafii-El-Idrissi Benhnia M, Pacheco YM, Ramos R, Leal M, Ruiz-Mateos E
Abstract:
.....We assayed the activation ex vivo and the responsiveness to TLR2 and TLR4 agonists in vitro in the three subsets and assessed the intracellular production of IL1-alpha (α), IL1-beta (β), IL-6, IL-8, TNF-α, and IL-10 of elderly adults (median 83 [67-90] years old; n = 20) compared with young controls (median 35 [27-40] years old; n = 20). Ex vivo, the elderly adults showed a higher percentage of classical monocytes that expressed intracellular IL1-α (p = .001), IL1-β (p = .001), IL-6 (p = .002), and IL-8 (p = .007). Similar results were obtained both for the intermediate and nonclassical subsets and in vitro. Polyfunctionality was higher in the elderly adults. The functionality ex vivo was strongly associated with soluble inflammatory markers. The activation phenotype was independently associated with the anti-cytomegalovirus IgG levels and with functional and cognitive decline. These data demonstrate that monocytes are key cell candidates for the source of the high soluble inflammatory levels. Our findings suggest that cytomegalovirus infection might be a driving force in the activation of monocytes and is associated with the functional and cognitive decline.
PMID: 26286603
Tags: CMV, immune senescence, inflammation