Litcius/Paper detail

Autologous NK cells propagated and activated ex vivo decrease senescence markers in human PBMCs

N. V. Chelyapov, Toai Nguyen, Rafael González

2022Biochemistry and Biophysics Reports16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Aging is a multifactorial process involving many steps including senescence. The immune system plays a critical role in aging where chronic inflammation and senescence has been shown to be detrimental. Natural killer (NK) cells are the predominant innate lymphocyte subset that mediate various responses to include surveillance and elimination of senescent cells. Here, we use autologous propagated and activated NK (aNK) cells from 5 patients to demonstrate that aNK cells decrease senescent cells in vitro and immunosenescence in humans based on markers p16 and β-galactosidase. In addition, inflammatory cytokine panel data suggest a role for removal of immunosenescence to reduce the aging-related inflammatory response.

Topics & Concepts

ImmunosenescenceSenescenceBiologyInflammationImmune systemEx vivoTelomereImmunologyInnate immune systemCell biologyCytokinePeripheral blood mononuclear cellIn vitroGeneticsGeneImmune Cell Function and InteractionImmune cells in cancerT-cell and B-cell Immunology
Autologous NK cells propagated and activated ex vivo decrease senescence markers in human PBMCs | Litcius