4.5 Article

Cumulative physiological stress is associated with age-related changes to peripheral T lymphocyte subsets in healthy humans

Journal

IMMUNITY & AGEING
Volume 20, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12979-023-00357-5

Keywords

Regulatory T lymphocyte; Stress; Allostatic load; Treg; Allostasis; Immunosenescence; Aging

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The study examined the relationship between cumulative physiological stress and lymphocyte changes associated with aging. The results showed that physiological stress load increased with age and was negatively correlated with the frequency of regulatory T lymphocytes. The findings suggest that physiological stress load may affect the frequencies of Treg cells in younger individuals, leading to levels similar to those seen in older adults.
BackgroundProgressive age-associated change in frequencies and functional capacities of immune cells is known as immunosenescence. Despite data linking chronic environmental, physiological, and psychosocial stressors with accelerated aging, how stress contributes to immunosenesence is not well characterized.ObjectiveTo help delineate the contribution of cumulative physiological stress on immunosensence we assessed relationships between a composite measurement of cumulative physiological stress, reflecting the functioning of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, sympathetic nervous system, cardiovascular system, and metabolic processes, and lymphocyte changes typically affiliated with aging in a cohort of healthy volunteers ranging from 18 to 66 y.ResultsPhysiological stress load positively correlated with subject age in the study cohort and was significantly higher in adults 50-66 y compared to adults 18-33 y and 34-49 y. Using physiological stress load, we identified a significant age-dependent association between stress load and frequencies of circulating regulatory T lymphocytes (Tregs). Frequencies were higher in younger participants, but only in participants exhibiting low physiological stress load. As stress load increased, frequencies of Tregs decreased in young participants but were unchanged with increasing stress load in middle and older age individuals. Follow-up analysis of stress load components indicated lower circulating DHEA-S and higher urinary norepinephrine as the primary contributors to the effects of total stress load on Tregs. In addition, we identified age-independent inverse associations between stress load and frequencies of naive Tregs and naive CD4 T cells and positive associations between stress load and frequencies of memory Tregs and memory CD4 T cells. These associations were primarily driven by stress load components waist circumference, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, CRP, and HbA1c. In summary, our study results suggest that, in younger people, physiological stress load may diminish regulatory T cell frequencies to levels seen in older persons. Furthermore, independent of age, stress load may contribute to contraction of the naive Treg pool and accumulation of memory Treg cells.

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