Abstract

Aging is associated with functional decline in the immune system and increases the risk of chronic diseases owing to smoldering inflammation. In the present study, we demonstrated an age-related increase in the accumulation of Programmed Death-1 (PD-1)+ memory-phenotype T cells that are considered "senescence-associated T cells" in both the visceral adipose tissue and spleen. As caloric restriction is an established intervention scientifically proven to exert anti-aging effects and greatly affects physiological and pathophysiological alterations with advanced age, we evaluated the effect of caloric restriction on the increase in this T-cell subpopulation and glucose tolerance in aged mice. Long-term caloric restriction significantly decreased the number of PD-1+ memory-phenotype cluster of differentiation (CD) 4+ and CD8+ T cells in the spleen and visceral adipose tissue, decreased M1-type macrophage accumulation in visceral adipose tissue, and improved insulin resistance in aged mice. Furthermore, the immunological depletion of PD-1+ T cells reduced adipose inflammation and improved insulin resistance in aged mice. Taken together with our previous report, these results indicate that senescence-related T-cell subpopulations are involved in the development of chronic inflammation and insulin resistance in the context of chronological aging and obesity. Thus, long-term caloric restriction and specific deletion of senescence-related T cells are promising interventions to regulate age-related chronic diseases.

Highlights

  • Aging might be a modifiable risk factor, and it is feasible to prevent age-related human diseases and frailty by modulating fundamental mechanisms by which aging progresses [1,2,3]

  • We evaluated the expression levels of p16 and H2AX in Programmed Death-1 (PD-1)+ and PD-1- T cells obtained from the spleen and epididymal VAT (eVAT)

  • There was no difference in the expression levels of p16, we found that the expression levels of H2AX in CD3+ PD-1+ T cells of eVAT were significantly higher than those in CD3+ PD-1- T cells of eVAT, in aged mice (Fig 2D)

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Summary

Introduction

Aging might be a modifiable risk factor, and it is feasible to prevent age-related human diseases and frailty by modulating fundamental mechanisms by which aging progresses [1,2,3].

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