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Immunosenescence profiles are not associated with muscle strength, physical performance and sarcopenia risk in very old adults: The Newcastle 85+ Study

Antoneta Granic, Carmen Martín-Ruiz, Richard Dodds, Louise Robinson, Ioakim Spyridopoulos, Thomas B. L. Kirkwood, Thomas von Zglinicki, Avan Aihie Sayer

2020Mechanisms of Ageing and Development16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Decline in immune system function (immunosenescence) has been implicated in several age-related disorders. However, little is known about whether alteration in T-cell senescence, a process underlying immunological ageing, is related to muscle health in very old adults (aged ≥85 years). Utilising data from the Newcastle 85+ Study, we aimed to (a) derive and characterise immunosenescence profiles by clustering 13 baseline immunosenescence-related biomarkers of lymphocyte compartments in 657 participants; (b) explore the association between the profiles and 5-year change in muscle strength (grip strength) and physical performance (Timed Up-and-Go test), and (c) determine whether immunosenescence profiles predict 3-year incident sarcopenia. Two distinct clusters were identified; Cluster 1 ('Senescent-like phenotype', n = 421), and Cluster 2 ('Less senescent-like phenotype', n = 236) in individuals with complete biomarker data. Although Cluster 1 was characterised by T-cell senescence (e.g., higher frequency of CD4 and CD8 senescence-like effector memory cells), and elements of the immune risk profile (lower CD4/CD8 ratio, CMV+), it was not associated with change in muscle function over time, or with prevalent or incident sarcopenia. Future studies will determine whether more in-depth characterisation or change in T-cell phenotypes predict the decline in muscle health in late adulthood.

Topics & Concepts

ImmunosenescenceSarcopeniaSenescenceAgeingImmune systemGrip strengthPhenotypeBiomarkerBiologyImmunologyCD8GerontologyInternal medicineMedicinePhysiologyGeneticsGeneNutrition and Health in AgingTelomeres, Telomerase, and SenescenceFrailty in Older Adults
Immunosenescence profiles are not associated with muscle strength, physical performance and sarcopenia risk in very old adults: The Newcastle 85+ Study | Litcius